Yasmond Fenderson v. State of Tennessee ( 2002 )


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  •          IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    January 22, 2002 Session
    YASMOND FENDERSON v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
    No. 68806 Richard R. Baumgartner, Judge
    No. E2001-01088-CCA-R3-PC
    May 2, 2002
    The petitioner, Yasmond Fenderson, filed a petition for post-conviction relief to challenge his Knox
    County convictions of second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit second-degree murder. The
    post-conviction court conducted an evidentiary hearing but denied post-conviction relief. The
    petitioner appeals and claims the ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Finding that the record
    supports the post-conviction court’s denial of relief, we affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed.
    JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOSEPH M. TIPTON and
    NORMA MCGEE OGLE, JJ., joined.
    Leslie M. Jeffress, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Yasmond Fenderson.
    Paul G. Summers, Attorney General & Reporter; Angele M. Gregory, Assistant Attorney General;
    Randall E. Nichols, District Attorney General; and G. Scott Green, Assistant District Attorney
    General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    A Knox County jury convicted the petitioner, Yasmond Fenderson, of second-degree
    murder and conspiracy to commit second-degree murder. This court affirmed the convictions on
    direct appeal, and the supreme court denied second-tier review. See State v. Yasmond Fenderson,
    No. 03C01-9711-CR-00496 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Jan. 6, 1999), perm. app. denied (Tenn.
    1999). The petitioner then filed a timely petition for post-conviction relief, which the lower court
    dismissed following an evidentiary hearing. Now appealing the dismissal, the petitioner claims that
    he suffered the ineffective assistance of trial counsel. In consequence of our holding that the record
    supports the denial of post-conviction relief, we affirm.
    The post-conviction record does not contain a copy of the trial record. We glean our
    knowledge of the facts of the conviction offense from this court’s direct-appeal opinion. See
    generally Yasmond Fenderson. In 1993, the petitioner and three or four other men went to the home
    of the victim, Major Kindell, to retrieve a quantity of drugs which apparently they believed Kindell
    had taken. The victim’s wife, who witnessed the confrontation between the victim and the visitors
    and the petitioner’s search of the house, testified that the petitioner was the “commander” of the
    visitors. In a statement given to the police, the petitioner stated that he had found what he was
    looking for upon searching the house. The victim’s wife testified that, after the search of the house,
    the petitioner told one of his armed associates, “Pop go [sic] this weasel.” The man to whom the
    petitioner spoke raised a gun and pointed it at the victim. After the victim’s wife hid in a closet, she
    heard two or three shots fired. Upon exiting the closet, she found her husband mortally wounded
    with two gunshots in the chest.
    At trial, the state introduced the petitioner’s pretrial statement in which he admitted
    that he ordered the gunman to shoot the victim. In this court’s opinion, we said, “At trial, [the
    petitioner] did not dispute his presence in the victim’s home the night of the crime; he disputes [the
    victim’s wife’s] characterization of his role as the leader in the offense.” 
    Id., slip op. at
    4.
    We will review the post-conviction evidence that is relevant to the issues on this
    appeal. The petitioner testified that his trial counsel failed to interview and subpoena witnesses,
    especially the men who were present at the time of the shooting and most especially, James Davis,
    who the petitioner claims was “the shooter.” He further testified that his trial counsel failed to call
    as a witness Terrence Johnson, who the petitioner claimed would have testified that James Davis
    admitted, in the presence of Johnson and the petitioner, to shooting the victim.
    In the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel testified that she fully prepared for trial and
    interviewed ten to fifteen people, including the men the petitioner claimed were present when the
    victim was shot. Each of these men, including James Davis, denied being present. She testified that
    she declined to call Terrence Johnson to testify because she believed that his testimony that James
    Davis admitted shooting the victim would have been “absolute hearsay.” She opined that the
    exception to the hearsay rule for statements against penal interest did not apply to Davis’ attributed
    statement because, at the time Davis made the statement to Johnson, Davis had not been charged
    with killing the victim.1
    Following the testimony of witnesses at the evidentiary hearing, post-conviction
    counsel argued that trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance when she failed to request a jury
    instruction as to facilitation and solicitation as lesser-included offenses of first-degree murder and
    the lesser-included offenses thereof. Post-conviction counsel acknowledged – and the trial court
    1
    Apparently, Mr. Davis was never charged with killing the victim. As pointed out by the petitioner’s
    trial counsel during her evidentiary hearing testimony, the petitioner was the only person charged with or convicted of
    killing the victim because he was the only person who admitted being present and the only one who was identified by
    the victim’s wife.
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    agreed – that the underlying issue of trial court error in failing to render these instructions had been
    waived due to the petitioner failing to raise it on direct appeal. The trial court opined that ineffective
    assistance could not be attributed to trial counsel because the trial court had an independent duty to
    instruct the jury as to applicable lesser-included offenses, regardless whether counsel requested the
    instruction. The trial court surmised that any ineffective assistance of counsel on this issue should
    be attributed to appellate counsel.2 At the evidentiary hearing and now on appeal, the petitioner
    continues to limit his claims of ineffective assistance to the performance of trial counsel.
    Before addressing the specific issues of the ineffective assistance of trial counsel that
    are raised on appeal, we review a few familiar concepts of post-conviction and constitutional law.
    A post-conviction petitioner has the burden of proving his claims by clear and
    convincing evidence. Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-30-201(f) (1997). The post-conviction court’s factual
    findings are reviewed de novo with a presumption of correctness unless the evidence preponderates
    otherwise, Fields v. State, 
    40 S.W.3d 450
    , 453 (Tenn. 2001); however, that court’s conclusions of
    law receive purely de novo review with no presumption of correctness, 
    id. The Sixth Amendment
    to the United States Constitution and Article I, section 9 of
    the Tennessee Constitution both provide that a defendant in a criminal case is entitled to effective
    assistance of counsel. Baxter v. Rose, 
    523 S.W.2d 930
    (Tenn. 1975). When a defendant claims
    ineffective assistance of counsel, the standard applied by the courts of Tennessee is whether the
    advice given or the service rendered by the attorney is within the range of competence demanded
    of attorneys in criminal cases. Summerlin v. State, 
    607 S.W.2d 495
    , 496 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1980).
    Thus, a post-conviction petitioner claiming ineffective assistance of counsel must establish by clear
    and convincing evidence that counsel’s performance fell below the required standard of competence.
    See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 2064 (1984); Michael E.
    Christian v. State, No. E2000-00922-CCA-R3-PC, slip op. at 9 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, June
    24, 2000) (“The Strickland standard has been applied to the right to counsel under Article I, section
    9 of the Tennessee Constitution.”), perm. app. denied (Tenn. 2001). Also, the petitioner must
    establish prejudice, that the deficient performance “actually had an adverse effect on the defense.”
    
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 693
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2067. Should the petitioner fail to establish either deficient
    performance or resulting prejudice, he is not entitled to relief. 
    Id. at 697, 104
    S. Ct. at 2069.
    When reviewing an attorney’s performance, courts do not “‘second guess’ tactical
    and strategic choices,” nor do we “measure [the] defense attorney’s representation by ‘20-20
    hindsight.’” Henley v. State, 
    960 S.W.2d 572
    , 579 (Tenn. 1997). We endeavor to eliminate “the
    distorting effects of hindsight . . . [and] evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time”
    of the conduct. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2065. “The fact that a particular strategy
    or tactic failed or hurt the defense, does not, standing alone, establish unreasonable representation.”
    2
    The amended petition for post-conviction relief asserted that “trial counsel” was ineffective because
    she failed to request the instructions as to facilitation and solicitation. The petitioner was represented on direct appeal
    by a diffe rent attorne y than h is trial counse l.
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    Goad v. State, 
    938 S.W.2d 363
    , 369 (Tenn. 1996). On the other hand, our “deference to matters of
    strategy and tactical choices applies only if the choices are informed ones based upon adequate
    preparation.” 
    Id. In his first
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the petitioner argues on appeal
    that his trial counsel deficiently performed by failing to subpoena James Davis to testify and by
    failing to call Terrence Johnson as a witness to Davis’ confession to shooting the victim. At the
    outset, we consider trial counsel’s handling of the issue of the statement-against-interest exception
    to the hearsay rule. See Tenn. R. Evid. 802, 804(3). This hearsay rule exception allows the
    introduction into evidence of an unavailable declarant’s out-of-court admissions that tend to subject
    the declarant to “criminal liability,” when a “reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not
    have made the statement unless believing it to be true.” 
    Id. 804(3). The petitioner
    argues that his
    trial counsel deficiently performed when, because she thought the evidence was “absolutely”
    inadmissible, she failed to establish Davis’ unavailability and failed to call Johnson to testify to
    Davis’ out-of-court confession.
    We begin by noting that the post-conviction court accredited trial counsel’s testimony
    that she interviewed ten to fifteen potential witnesses, including the persons whose names the
    petitioner provided and including Davis and Johnson. Davis denied being present at the time of the
    shooting, and although counsel saw no point in calling him as a witness, we discern that counsel
    missed the point of calling Davis as witness. Had counsel further developed on the record Davis’
    circumstances, she might have established Davis’ unavailability through showing that he was
    “beyond the jurisdiction of the court and the reach of its processes” or that, had Davis appeared in
    court, he would “refuse[] to testify on the ground of self-incrimination.” See State v. Cureton, 
    38 S.W.3d 64
    , 79 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000) (for purposes of hearsay rule exception stated in Tennessee
    Rule of Evidence 804(3), unavailability of the declarant may be shown, inter alia, when the
    declarant is “beyond the jurisdiction of the court and the reach of its processes” or when the
    declarant “is present in court and refuses to testify on the ground of self-incrimination”) (emphasis
    added), perm. app. denied (Tenn. 2000). Had the trial court found Davis to be unavailable, the way
    would have been cleared for Johnson, who apparently complied with a subpoena and was on hand
    during the trial, to testify that Davis had made a statement against his penal interest by confessing
    to shooting the victim. It is not a requirement of Rule 804(3), as trial counsel supposed, that the
    statement’s admission into evidence depends upon the declarant being charged with the offense.
    Trial counsel’s view of the exception was erroneous.
    That having been said, however, we reject the petitioner’s claim of prejudice for the
    simple reason that he has failed to establish the claim by clear and convincing evidence. He failed
    to establish in his evidentiary hearing that Davis was unavailable at the time of trial. To be sure, trial
    counsel testified that she tried unsuccessfully to serve a subpoena on him, but the petitioner offered
    no proof that Davis was beyond the reach of the trial court’s process. See 
    Cureton, 38 S.W.3d at 79
    .
    Also, trial counsel testified that when she interviewed Davis, he denied being present at the victim’s
    home at the time of the shooting. There is no indication in the record that, had he been called to the
    stand at trial, he would have refused to testify on the grounds of self-incrimination, and there is no
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    indication in the record that Davis was unavailable for any other reason. See 
    id. Having failed to
    establish in the post-conviction proceeding that Davis was unavailable for trial, the petitioner has
    failed to establish that Johnson’s testimony would have been admissible.
    Furthermore, the petitioner failed to present the testimony of either Davis or Johnson
    in the evidentiary hearing. “It is elementary that neither a trial judge nor an appellate court can
    speculate or guess on the question of . . . what a witness’s testimony might have been if introduced
    by [post-conviction] counsel.” Black v. State, 
    794 S.W.2d 752
    , 757 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990). The
    petitioner is not entitled to relief on the claim that counsel failed to call or use a witness at trial
    unless he produced the witness at the post-conviction hearing and established that the witness
    “would have testified favorably in support of his defense if called.” 
    Id. at 758. In
    particular, we
    cannot speculate that, had Davis been unavailable, Johnson would have testified about Davis’
    confession.
    Additionally, we note that Davis’ confession to shooting the victim did not per se
    contradict the state’s theory of the homicide. The state prosecuted the case via a theory that the
    petitioner was criminally responsible for the act of another. Indeed, Davis’ possible role as the
    shooter fits within the state’s theory of the case. We cannot discern how the petitioner was
    prejudiced by the failure to use evidence of Davis’ admission that he shot the victim.
    Thus, with regard to the trial counsel’s investigation and management of witnesses,
    no ineffective assistance has been demonstrated.
    Now we address the petitioner’s other claim of ineffective assistance – that trial
    counsel failed to request jury instructions as to facilitation and solicitation of first-degree murder and
    the usual lesser-included offenses of that charge. Although this issue has been raised in the
    petitioner’s brief, the petitioner offered no proof in his evidentiary hearing about the failure to
    instruct on lesser-included offenses and relied solely upon argument of counsel that, as alleged in
    the amended post-conviction petition, trial counsel deficiently performed to the petitioner’s
    detriment when she failed to press for the instructions on facilitation and solicitation. The post-
    conviction judge ruled that, had trial counsel requested the instructions, he as the trial judge would
    have denied the requests based upon his perception that the proof did not warrant the instructions.
    At any rate, the post-conviction judge commented that, given the statutory duty placed upon a trial
    court to charge all applicable lesser-included offenses even in the absence of a defense request, trial
    counsel did not deficiently perform; rather, any deficiency of performance in failing to press the
    instruction issue would have to be attributed to appellate counsel.
    Facilitation of a felony is committed when a person “knowingly furnishes substantial
    assistance” to another in the commission of a felony, knowing that the other intends to commit a
    specific felony but lacking the intent to make the person criminally responsible as a principal for the
    felony. Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-403(a) (1997). The punishment for facilitation is graded as one
    class below the charged felony. 
    Id. § 39-11-403(b). One
    commits solicitation who “by means of
    oral, written or electronic communication, directly or through another, intentionally commands,
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    requests or hires another to commit a criminal offense, or attempts to command, request or hire
    another to commit a criminal offense, with the intent that the criminal offense be committed.” 
    Id. § 39-12-102(a) (1997).
    “Solicitation is an offense two (2) classifications lower than the most serious
    offense solicited . . . .” 
    Id. § 39-12-107(b). To
    be sure, facilitation and solicitation are lesser-included offenses of the charged
    offense of first-degree murder and of any other lesser-include offenses of first-degree murder. State
    v. Burns, 
    6 S.W.3d 453
    , 466-67 (1999). The trial court was obliged to instruct the jury as to these
    lesser-included offenses if the evidence in the case was sufficient to support convictions for them
    and was capable of enabling reasonable minds to accept that the defendant committed facilitation
    and/or solicitation. State v. Walter Lee Allen, – S.W.3d –, –, No. E1998-00416-SC-R11-CD, slip
    op. at 6 (Tenn. Knoxville, Feb. 22, 2002). This obligation to instruct as to these lesser-included
    offenses was free-standing and not dependent upon the defendant’s request for the instructions.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 40-18-110 (1997).
    We conclude that the petitioner has failed to establish that counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance by not requesting instructions on facilitation and solicitation. We base our
    conclusion upon trial counsel’s affirmative actions to dissuade the trial court from giving the
    instructions.
    At this juncture, we explain the derivation and extent of our knowledge of trial
    counsel’s actions. The record of the trial proceedings was not exhibited to the evidentiary hearing;
    however, the petitioner has appended a portion of the record to his appellate brief. Of course, the
    usually prevailing rule is that allegations offered by counsel in an appellate brief are not evidence.
    See, e.g., State v. Keller, 
    813 S.W.2d 146
    , 150 n. 4 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991); State v. Roberts, 
    755 S.W.2d 833
    , 836 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988). In the present case, however, the defendant’s appendix
    that shows the occurrences regarding the trial court’s charge conference is not self-serving and is
    adopted by the state. Accordingly, we utilize the information, which shows that in the face of the
    trial court considering instructions on facilitation and solicitation – and the state requesting
    instructions on at least solicitation – counsel for the petitioner opposed the use of both instructions.
    Apparently in light of counsel’s objections, the trial court deemed it unfair to the petitioner to
    instruct as to facilitation and solicitation.
    This court has held that a defense counsel’s affirmative acquiescence in the failure
    to charge applicable lesser-included offenses constitutes a waiver of the error. See State v. Elesa D.
    McDaniels, No. E2000-02790-CCA-R3-CD, slip op. at 6-7 (Tenn. Crim. App., Knoxville, Nov. 1,
    2001). Implicit in that holding is that on occasion counsel may favor the omission of an instruction
    as a matter of strategy or tactics. In assessing the effectiveness of counsel’s performance, reviewing
    courts do not generally second-guess strategic or tactical choices made upon adequate preparation.
    Hellard v. State, 
    629 S.W.2d 4
    (Tenn. 1982).
    Of course, the problem in the present case is that the record is silent on whether trial
    counsel’s opposition to the instructions was a strategic or tactical choice. In our view, because the
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    petitioner bore the burden of establishing his claims by clear and convincing evidence, he failed to
    establish deficient performance when he failed to show that counsel’s affirmative actions were not
    strategic or tactical or failed to show that strategic or tactical choices were made without adequate
    preparation. The petitioner testified in the evidentiary hearing and made no assertions in this regard.
    Trial counsel testified, apparently as a witness for the state in the evidentiary hearing. She was not
    asked about the instruction issue by either the assistant district attorney or counsel for the petitioner
    on cross-examination. The record before us simply fails to support a finding of deficient
    performance. Thus, on this hill, the petitioner’s claim of ineffective assistance dies.
    Having discerned no reversible error in the proceedings below, we affirm the
    judgment of the trial court.
    ___________________________________
    JAMES CURWOOD WITT, JR., JUDGE
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