William Boatwright v. State of Tennessee ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                        03/10/2020
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    September 25, 2019 Session
    WILLIAM BOATWRIGHT v. STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
    No. 102783     G. Scott Green, Judge
    No. E2018-02185-CCA-R3-PC
    The Petitioner, William Boatwright, appeals from the Knox County Criminal Court’s
    denial of his petition for post-conviction relief from his especially aggravated robbery,
    aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, and two aggravated assault convictions, for
    which he is serving a forty-seven-year sentence. The Petitioner contends that he received
    the ineffective assistance of counsel. We conclude that the Petitioner received the
    ineffective assistance of counsel, reverse the judgment of the post-conviction court, and
    remand this case for a limited motion for a new trial regarding the sufficiency of the
    evidence issues addressed in the appeal.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Reversed;
    Case Remanded
    ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT
    W. WEDEMEYER, J., joined. THOMAS T. WOODALL, J., filed an opinion concurring in part
    and dissenting in part.
    Joshua Hedrick, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, William Boatwright.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Katherine C. Redding, Assistant
    Attorney General; Charme P. Allen, District Attorney General; and Leslie Nassios,
    Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    This case initially arose from the Petitioner’s participation in a home invasion of
    an apartment in which multiple people were present. See State v. William Ray
    Boatwright, No. E2012-00688-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2013 WL 775787
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Feb.
    28, 2013), perm. app. denied (Tenn. June 12, 2013). The trial court merged the
    aggravated assault convictions with the especially aggravated robbery conviction and
    sentenced the Petitioner to forty-nine years in incarceration. In the appeal from the
    conviction proceedings, this court summarized the facts as follows:
    This case arises out of a home invasion/robbery that occurred very
    early on the morning of May 22, 2008, at the Knoxville apartment of
    Christy Hines. Hines was at home with her mother, Jamesina Thompson;
    her friend, Alora Williams; her cousin, Stephon Matthews; and her two
    young children when someone knocked on the door. Matthews cracked the
    door open and a group of armed, masked men rushed in, terrorizing the
    occupants, robbing Matthews of his cash, and taking a carton of cigarettes
    and a camcorder from the apartment. Just before leaving, one of the men,
    whom Williams later identified as the defendant, delivered a violent blow
    with his gun to Matthews’ head, fracturing his skull. The Knox County
    Grand Jury subsequently returned a five-count indictment charging the
    defendant with especially aggravated robbery, aggravated robbery,
    especially aggravated burglary, and two counts of aggravated assault.
    At the defendant’s trial, Stephon Matthews testified that in May of
    2008, he was seventeen years old, a high school football player, and living
    with his cousin, Christy Hines, in her Knoxville apartment. On the night of
    the burglary, he and his family were at home when someone knocked on
    the door. They asked who it was, and a person answered “Mike.” He
    opened the door and four men rushed in, knocking him to the floor as they
    “slung the door open.” He heard someone say, “[C]’mon Strong,” and the
    men twice searched his pockets for his money as he lay on the floor. They
    were unable to get it, so he took $200 out of his pocket and threw it on the
    table for the men to take, saying, “[H]ere.” Before the intruders left, one of
    the men who was standing over him said, “I’m sorry I’ve got to do this to
    you, Cuz,” and then hit him in the head with a gun. Matthews testified that
    his skull was fractured, which required him to undergo emergency surgery
    and spend a week in the hospital. He said that his memory was impaired by
    his head injury and that he was no longer able to play football.
    On cross-examination, Matthews acknowledged that his testimony at
    the preliminary hearing was that the man who struck him was wearing a
    blue bandana.
    Jamesina Thompson testified that on May 21, 2008, she and her
    daughter, Christy Hines, spent the afternoon sitting outside with her
    daughter’s two children and a “bunch of little kids” from the community
    holding a dance contest for the children, which her daughter recorded on
    her camcorder. During that time, the defendant arrived with three other
    -2-
    men, said hello to them, and then went up the steps to the neighbors that he
    was visiting.
    Later that night, her daughter’s friend, Alora Williams, came over to
    visit and Matthews, who had been out, returned home. Thompson testified
    that Hines was “getting her hair done” and the rest of them were watching
    television when someone knocked at the door. She twice asked who it was,
    and each time the person replied, “Mike.” She explained that she asked
    twice because the next-door neighbor was named Mike, but he was
    Caucasian and she knew that it was not his voice at the door. Suspicious,
    she peeked out the window and saw that the person was not standing in
    front of the door where she could see him but instead beside the door
    wearing a hood. In the meantime, Matthews had gotten up to answer the
    door. She and her daughter both called out a warning to him, but he moved
    fast and they were too late to prevent him from opening the door, with his
    foot behind it so that he could peek out. As soon as he did so, there was a
    “big kaboom” as the door was burst all the way open.
    Thompson testified that she got behind a large speaker in the living
    room and remained there without moving the entire time that the intruders
    were in the home. She heard someone say, “[Y]ou already know what time
    it is,” followed by “[I]s there anybody else in here? If there’s anybody else
    in here, come out now or I’ll shoot everybody in here.” At that point,
    Williams, who had fled from the room when the door burst open, came
    from around the corner and stood against the living room wall. After that,
    Thompson heard people rummaging back and forth throughout the home,
    one of the intruders call her granddaughter by name as he asked her if
    anyone else was in the apartment; someone asking her granddaughter why
    the light was so dim and telling her not to cry; Matthews[’] volunteering to
    give up his money and one of the intruders saying, “[T]hat’s good”; one of
    the intruder[’]s instructing another one to get a box of Newport cigarettes;
    the sound of feet moving away; a period of silence; one of the intruder[’]s
    saying, “[S]orry I got to do this to you, Cuz”; and then the sound of
    Matthews[’] groaning.
    Thompson testified that after the intruders left, Williams ran to shut
    the front door and she went to assist Matthews, who had “staggered up
    from the floor” and was lying slumped on the couch with blood running
    down his face. About eight or nine minutes later, Matthews’ voice became
    garbled and he appeared to be having a seizure, so they called an
    ambulance, which transported him to the hospital for emergency surgery.
    Thompson testified that, in addition to Matthews’ cash and the carton of
    cigarettes, the intruders took the camcorder that her daughter had been
    -3-
    using earlier that afternoon. She said that the next day they found the
    camcorder, which had been broken “to shreds,” behind a neighbor’s house.
    Thompson testified that she informed the police officers who
    investigated the crimes that one of the [intruders’] voices sounded very
    familiar to her. After the police left, she found two slugs on the carpet,
    which she turned over to the police. Thompson said that she heard a
    clicking sound at the time one of the intruders threatened to shoot everyone
    in the apartment, and she therefore assumed that the slugs fell from his gun
    at that time.
    Christy Hines testified that at the time of the burglary she made
    money by selling crack cocaine from her Knoxville apartment. She said
    that on the afternoon of May 21, 2008, she was sitting outside in the
    parking lot with her mother and her children “making her sales” and
    videotaping the children when the defendant arrived with James Cade and
    two other men. She stated that the defendant and Cade remained at the
    complex for a couple of hours and saw her making drug sales during that
    time.
    Hines testified that she, her family, and her friend, Alora Williams,
    were inside her apartment later that night when a man wearing a hood
    knocked at the door and identified himself as “Mike.” She said she was
    standing right behind her cousin when he cracked the door open, and she
    saw James Cade pulling a blue bandana over his face just before he and the
    other men rushed into the apartment. She stated that she got down on the
    floor between the wall and the couch, where she heard the intruders say a
    number of things, including: “[Y]’all mother fuckers know what it is”;
    “[W]here the shit at”; “[C]’mon, Strong”; and “[B]itch, get out [of] the
    kitchen and come back in there or I’m shooting everybody in the house.”
    She also heard one of the men direct another to get the carton of Newports,
    and one of them say, just before leaving, “I hate to do you like this, Cuz,”
    which was followed by a sound like an egg splattering and Matthews
    moaning.
    Hines testified that the men took Matthews’ cash, her camcorder,
    and the carton of cigarettes. She described finding the two bullets in the
    living room after the police left her apartment and her discovery of the
    smashed camcorder behind the neighboring building the next day. She said
    that she described Cade to the police and later picked his photograph out of
    a photographic lineup. She also testified that she told the police she
    recognized the defendant’s voice and that she gave them his name.
    -4-
    Alora Williams testified that she fled to the kitchen when the door of
    the apartment was burst open, but “the next thing [she] kn[e]w, a big gun
    was in [her] face” and one of the intruders threatened to shoot everyone in
    the apartment if she did not come out. She, therefore, put her hands in the
    air and returned to the living room, where she slumped against a wall and
    watched everything that transpired. She said that two men ran to the back
    of the apartment while two remained in the front. One of those two was
    wearing a blue bandana and the other one was wearing a stocking cap
    pulled down over his eyes. While the men in the back of the apartment
    were making noises that sounded as if they were tearing the rooms apart,
    the man in the stocking cap asked her questions about herself such as her
    name and where she was from, which she found odd. After the two men in
    the back ran to the front of the apartment and the men were heading out the
    door, the man who had been talking to her turned back and said, “I hate to
    do this to you, Cuz,” before striking Matthews on the head with his gun.
    Williams made a positive courtroom identification of the defendant
    as the man who struck Matthews in the head and said that Matthews had
    already given his money to the defendant before the defendant struck him.
    She said that she could see “straight through” the defendant’s stocking cap
    and that she also recognized him by his voice. Williams explained that she
    had met the defendant before the burglary at a local mall, where he had
    engaged her in a couple of brief conversations and asked for her telephone
    number. They never went out on a date, however.
    On cross-examination, Williams reiterated that she was able to see
    through the defendant’s stocking cap, which, she said, was made of “see-
    through mesh.” She testified that the defendant was the only one who
    talked and that her attention was concentrated on his mouth and his
    distinctive teeth, which consisted of front teeth that “stuck out” and bottom
    teeth that were discolored, rotting, and “kind of wrangled.” On redirect
    examination, she testified that she identified the defendant from a
    photographic lineup about a week after the burglary and at a preliminary
    hearing held several weeks after the burglary.
    James Cade testified that he was with the defendant in the parking
    lot of Hines’s apartment complex for about thirty minutes early in the
    evening of May 21, 2008, before leaving by himself. Later that day, the
    defendant called to ask where he could get some drugs, and he gave him
    Hines’s name. He and the defendant returned to the complex, met Hines as
    she was coming out of her apartment, and asked her about her drugs. She
    informed them that she did not have any at that time, so they left the
    -5-
    complex again and he dropped the defendant off before going home and
    then to bed.
    At about 1:30 or 2:00 a.m. the next morning, the defendant called to
    ask for a ride. Cade testified that he picked up the defendant and two men
    who were with the defendant and took them to Hines’s apartment. All four
    of them walked up to Hines’s porch, and the defendant knocked on the door
    and announced that he was “Mike.” When the door opened “a little bit,”
    the defendant took out a gun and he and his two friends “bum-rushed in.”
    Cade said that he initially “froze up,” but then returned to his car and went
    home and back to bed. The next morning, the defendant called to ask why
    he had deserted them and he explained to the defendant that he “didn’t
    know it was going to go down like that.” The defendant then told him that
    he had to hit Matthews in the head with his pistol “so he couldn’t remember
    nothing” because Matthews had gotten too close to him when he was taking
    his money.
    Cade, who said he had no criminal record before his charges in the
    instant case, testified that he had pled guilty to facilitation of especially
    aggravated robbery for his role in the crimes. On cross-examination, he
    acknowledged that he was originally charged with not only especially
    aggravated robbery, but also aggravated robbery and especially aggravated
    burglary. He further acknowledged that he had agreed to testify against the
    defendant in exchange for being allowed to plead guilty to the lesser-
    included offense of facilitation of especially aggravated robbery and the
    dismissal of the other charges against him.
    Investigator Tiffany Copley of the Knoxville Police Department’s
    Forensic Unit identified the bullets collected from the crime scene as well
    as various photographs of the apartment and Matthews’ head injury and
    testified that she was unable to obtain any usable fingerprints from the
    apartment.
    Matthews’ medical records, which included a discharge summary
    noting that he had surgery for a skull fracture, were admitted as an exhibit
    by stipulation of the parties and published to the jury.
    Investigator Charles Lee of the Knoxville Police Department’s
    Major Crimes Unit testified that he showed Williams a photographic lineup
    on May 30, 2008, from which she positively identified the defendant. On
    that same day, he showed Hines a separate photographic lineup from which
    she made a positive identification of James Cade.
    -6-
    Following the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion for
    judgment of acquittal, Ebony Wright testified on the defendant’s behalf that
    the defendant was with her at a nightclub from approximately 11:30 to
    11:45 p.m. on May 21, 2008, until 3:45 a.m. the next day. On cross-
    examination, Wright testified that her earlier preliminary hearing testimony
    in which she said that she and the defendant were together on the night of
    May 22, 2008, was a “miscommunication.” She acknowledged having
    testified at that hearing that she had been watching the Cavaliers play the
    Lakers on the night the defendant came to visit her. When informed that
    the game did not occur on that night, she testified that “it might’ve been a
    different team.” Finally, she acknowledged that she had been convicted of
    shoplifting in June 2000.
    The defendant elected not to testify and rested his case without
    presenting any additional evidence. Following deliberations, the jury
    convicted him of the indicted charges.
    
    Id. at *1-5.
    On appeal, this court modified the Petitioner’s conviction for especially
    aggravated burglary to aggravated burglary and modified his effective sentence to forty-
    seven years’ incarceration. The judgments of the trial court were affirmed in all other
    respects.
    The Petitioner sought post-conviction relief, alleging multiple instances of
    ineffective assistance of trial counsel, and the post-conviction court denied relief. On
    appeal, this court summarized the facts as follows:
    . . . [T]rial counsel testified that he had practiced law since 2003.
    Counsel stated that he could not recall whether he spoke with the
    Petitioner’s previous attorney about the case, that he was unaware previous
    counsel had hired an investigator, and that he did not discuss the
    Petitioner’s case with previous counsel’s investigator. Counsel said that he
    did not review witness statements or recordings prepared by previous
    counsel’s investigator and that he was unaware Ms. Williams “recanted her
    identification” of the Petitioner to the investigator before the trial.
    Trial counsel testified that he investigated the case and that his fee
    for investigating may have been included with the “prepare for trial” or
    “discovery” fee claim entries. Counsel stated that he reviewed the
    evidence, that he and the Petitioner, along with the Petitioner’s girlfriend,
    discussed the case, and that he spoke with the State during his investigation.
    Counsel said that he did not interview the victims but that the victims’
    testimony was “consistent with what [the Petitioner] said they were going
    to testify to, [and] with what the State said they were going to testify to.”
    -7-
    Counsel stated that codefendant Cade was an accomplice, that the trial
    transcript did not reflect that counsel requested an accomplice jury
    instruction, and that he did not know if the issue was raised in a motion for
    a new trial. Counsel stated that he raised the lack of an instruction on
    appeal but agreed that if an issue were not raised in a motion for a new trial,
    it was generally waived.
    Trial counsel testified that the “heart of the case” was the especially
    aggravated robbery charge and that he was aware the robbery statute stated
    the taking must be concurrent with or preceded by force. When asked
    whether he was “familiar with cases such as Owens and Swift about a
    taking followed later in time by an assault and how it’s distinguished from
    a robbery,” counsel said that he had not been presented with that issue and
    was unaware of the issue at the time of the Petitioner’s trial. The following
    exchange occurred between the post-conviction court, post-conviction
    counsel, and the State:
    THE COURT: Was sufficiency of the evidence an issue
    litigated on appeal?
    THE STATE: The [court of criminal appeals] found, your
    Honor, please, that there was sufficient evidence to support
    the convictions and just – I think the only thing that changed
    was that I convicted him of especially aggravated burglary
    and especially aggravated robbery, and so the [court of
    criminal appeals] decided that that was duplicative and so
    they reduced the especially aggravated burglary to aggravated
    burglary and adjusted his sentence.
    ...
    [POST-CONVICTION COUNSEL]: Sufficiency was
    litigated. This – the exact issue of the timing of the force was
    not.
    THE COURT: But how would sufficiency of the evidence not
    subsume that issue?
    [POST-CONVICTION COUNSEL]: . . . [I]f no party pressed
    it to the [c]ourt, the court of appeals cannot be expected to
    reach into that issue without having been asked and find
    essentially that nobody’s complained about the timing of the
    -8-
    force, but we’ve decided that we’re going to deal with the
    timing of the force.
    ...
    THE COURT: Well, go ahead. Go ahead.
    Trial counsel stated that he did not argue that the serious bodily injury
    occurred after the taking and that he could not remember if he argued the
    Petitioner committed an aggravated robbery rather than especially
    aggravated robbery during his closing argument.
    Trial counsel testified that the Petitioner received a twelve-year
    sentence on the aggravated robbery of Ms. Williams. Counsel was shown a
    transcript of Ms. Williams’s testimony and was asked what property was
    taken from Ms. Williams. The following exchange occurred:
    [THE STATE]: Your Honor, let me just object at this point –
    THE COURT: Why should I not sustain that, [Post-
    Conviction Counsel], if the court of criminal appeals has
    ruled on the sufficiency of the evidence within this record to
    sustain these convictions, has this not been previously
    determined? Where are we going?
    ...
    [POST-CONVICTION COUNSEL]: Your Honor, the issue
    before the Court is, in this case, whether or not it was argued
    to the trial court level and argued on appeal whether that issue
    was raised. Now, I recognize that the court of criminal
    appeals was asked as a general proposition to review the
    sufficiency of the evidence, but as this [c]ourt is aware our
    position is that a court, a trial court, or an appellate court,
    should not be expected to on its own parse through the issues
    when the issues are not pressed by the litigants.
    ...
    THE COURT: All right. Well, I’ll give you a little latitude. I
    know what the issue is here and you know where I stand on –
    [POST-CONVICTION COUNSEL]: I do.
    -9-
    THE COURT: – the sufficiency of the evidence.
    Trial counsel testified that the fee claim reflected he spent one and
    one half hours with the Petitioner before the trial. Counsel stated that he
    spoke with the Petitioner about testifying and the Petitioner’s criminal
    record and that “whether it was a [thirty] second discussion or a [thirty]
    minute discussion, [the Petitioner] knew he could not testify.” Counsel
    stated that whether to testify was the Petitioner’s decision “but with his
    record, it would’ve been devastating to any sort of defense.”
    Trial counsel testified that this case was all about “identification”
    and that Ms. Williams was the only witness who could “sort of identify” the
    Petitioner. Counsel agreed that the identification of the Petitioner
    “basically turned on Ms. Williams’s somewhat identification and the
    testimony of [codefendant] Cade” and that Ms. Williams had selected the
    Petitioner from a photograph lineup a few weeks after the incident.
    On cross-examination, trial counsel testified that he did not represent
    the Petitioner at the preliminary hearing, that he received a transcript of the
    preliminary hearing, and that Ebony Wright testified as a defense witness at
    the hearing and at the trial. Counsel stated that previous counsel withdrew
    because the Petitioner was uncooperative.
    Trial counsel testified that he learned codefendant Cade was going to
    testify days before the trial, that he cross-examined codefendant Cade about
    his hope to receive a lesser sentence in exchange for his testimony, and that
    codefendant Cade’s testimony was corroborated by other evidence.
    Counsel said Ms. Williams identified the Petitioner on the night of the
    robbery in a photograph lineup and at the preliminary hearing. Counsel
    stated that Ms. Williams said she first met the Petitioner at a shopping mall
    and that she recognized the Petitioner’s teeth and voice during the robbery.
    Counsel said that Ms. Hines and Ms. Thompson testified that they saw the
    Petitioner and codefendant Cade in their neighborhood on the day of the
    robbery and that Ms. Hines said she recognized the Petitioner’s voice.
    Counsel stated that Ms. Williams and Mr. Matthews were inside the
    apartment when the robbery occurred and that Ms. Williams did not suffer
    serious bodily injury.
    Trial counsel testified that the State filed a notice of intent to seek
    enhanced punishment based on the Petitioner’s criminal record, which
    included crimes of violence and dishonesty, including theft. Counsel stated
    that he agreed with the Petitioner’s decision not to testify and that the
    Petitioner would have had “major credibility issues” if he had testified.
    -10-
    Trial counsel testified that his primary focus was to challenge the
    Petitioner’s identity and codefendant Cade’s testimony. Counsel said that
    he called Ms. Wright as an alibi witness but that her testimony did not
    provide a “complete alibi.” Counsel stated that it was possible his fee claim
    did not include all of his work in the case. Counsel said that he filed a
    timely motion for a new trial and a notice of appeal. On redirect
    examination, counsel testified that he did not challenge the admissibility of
    the Petitioner’s previous convictions before the trial.
    Private Investigator Thomas Ham testified that previous counsel
    hired him to investigate the Petitioner’s case and that he interviewed Ms.
    Williams by telephone. A transcript of the interview was introduced as an
    exhibit and reflected that Ms. Williams told Mr. Ham that the incident was
    “so long ago [she didn’t] remember anything” and that she could not
    recognize the Petitioner’s voice. Mr. Ham stated that he met with previous
    counsel and the Petitioner on one occasion and that he created a
    memorandum of the meeting. Mr. Ham said trial counsel never contacted
    him, asked for his records, or requested that he continue investigating. On
    cross-examination, Mr. Ham testified that he was unaware Ms. Williams
    identified the Petitioner from a photograph lineup.
    William Boatwright v. State, No. E2017-00211-CCA-R3-PC, 
    2018 WL 2324369
    , at *1-6
    (Tenn. Crim. App. May 22, 2018).
    On appeal, this court remanded the case to the post-conviction court for findings
    of fact and conclusions of law related to the Petitioner’s allegations that trial counsel
    provided ineffective assistance by failing to challenge the sufficiency of the especially
    aggravated robbery conviction on the basis that Mr. Matthews did not suffer serious
    bodily injury until after the taking had occurred and by failing to assert that the
    aggravated robbery conviction relative to Ms. Williams should have been dismissed
    because Ms. Williams did not possess the property when it was stolen. The present
    appeal is limited to these allegations of ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
    On September 27, 2018, the post-conviction court determined, without receiving
    additional evidence, that the injury inflicted upon the Mr. Matthews occurred “during
    with and concurrent with the taking of the property.” Relative to whether Ms. Williams
    possessed the property taken during the incident, the court determined that the trial court,
    as the thirteenth juror, concluded the evidence was sufficient to support the Petitioner’s
    conviction for the aggravated robbery of Ms. Williams, relying in part upon the pattern
    jury instruction definition of “owner.” As a result, the court determined that the
    Petitioner failed to establish he received the ineffective assistance of counsel.
    -11-
    Although the post-conviction court requested that post-conviction counsel prepare
    a proposed order based upon the court’s determinations, an order was not entered, and on
    November 9, 2018, trial counsel was recalled for further testimony.
    Trial counsel testified that Mr. Matthews, the victim of the especially aggravated
    robbery conviction, gave the Petitioner, who held a pistol, and the codefendants
    approximately $200. Counsel agreed that Mr. Matthews was struck in the head with the
    pistol, which counsel referred to as “pistol whipped,” as the Petitioner and the other
    perpetrators “were on their way out” of the apartment. Counsel said that he would not
    dispute the trial evidence if it showed that Mr. Matthews was assaulted after “they had
    the money.” Counsel said that the basis for the serious bodily injury was Mr. Matthew’s
    skull fracture.
    Trial counsel testified, when asked if he were aware of our supreme court’s Owens
    and Swift opinions, that he was aware of the case, which he did not identify by name, that
    predated the Petitioner’s trial but that the other case was “an unpublished opinion that
    may have not quite been run through yet or just been decided” by this court. Counsel
    agreed that he previously testified that he was not aware of any issue related to the timing
    of the taking and the infliction of serious bodily injury upon Mr. Matthews. Counsel said
    that the chosen defense was identity and that to argue an especially aggravated robbery
    did not occur because of the timing of the force used to inflict serious bodily injury would
    have been disingenuous to the jury. Counsel agreed he neither raised the issue in the
    motion for a new trial nor on appeal. Counsel disagreed that if a court determined that
    the taking preceded the force, an especially aggravated robbery could not have occurred.
    Trial counsel testified that the offense had not been completed before the injury
    was inflicted upon Mr. Matthews because the incident occurred inside an apartment,
    rather than on the street. When asked if he considered whether the facts supported an
    especially aggravated robbery conviction, counsel stated,
    A lot of things were considered. The identification of [the Petitioner] was
    the basis [of] our defense. That’s the route we both chose to go down. He
    had his alibi witness. He’s not there, so we did not go down other routes
    that would’ve been a little difficult to sustain to a judge or a jury.
    Counsel said, though, that he did not know if he considered but chose not to raise the
    issue. Counsel agreed that his testimony was that he was unaware of this issue at the time
    of the trial and that he neither raised the issue in the motion for a judgment of acquittal
    nor on appeal. Counsel explained,
    The crime would have not been completed in order to have been able to
    make that argument. I need to have factual basis for me to make an
    argument to this Court, to that Court, to an Appellate Court, I’m not going
    -12-
    to make an argument that I don’t believe is a credible argument based in
    fact and in law when you combine the facts to the law, so that decision was
    made.
    Counsel said this decision was made when he filed the appeal. When asked when
    counsel became aware of the issue before seeking appellate relief, he stated, “I don’t
    know. I don’t know whenever. I don’t know.” He said that he analyzed this issue “after
    the hearings we’ve had and the appeal briefs that [post-conviction counsel] filed and I
    looked at, I had to apply those to figure out what [post-conviction counsel] was after.”
    Counsel did not think he was “wrong in what [he] did back then.” Counsel stated that the
    sufficiency of the especially aggravated robbery conviction “just wasn’t anything that we
    were focused on until it came up afterwards.”
    Trial counsel testified that $200 was taken from Mr. Matthews and that a
    camcorder, cigarettes, and a PlayStation console were taken from the apartment. Counsel
    did not dispute that Ms. Williams did not live in the apartment. Counsel disagreed with
    the assertion that if Ms. Williams did not own any of the property taken during the
    incident and did not have possession of the property, she could not have been a robbery
    victim. Counsel stated that he assumed everyone inside the apartment owned “everything
    in the apartment, if I don’t know who owns specific things.” Counsel agreed the jury was
    able to assume that everyone inside the apartment owned everything inside the apartment.
    He did not recall whether he questioned Ms. Williams about whether she owned any of
    the property taken during the incident. Counsel said that he neither raised this issue in
    the motion for a judgment of acquittal, the motion for a new trial, nor on appeal. Counsel
    said he did not know why he did not raise the issue.
    The post-conviction court concluded from the bench that trial counsel exercised
    “sound trial strategy not to be questioning and raising these issues in the presence of the
    jury when the whole defense is identification.” The court determined that counsel did not
    provide ineffective assistance “in his representation for how he tried the case in the
    presence of the jury, i.e., the questions and the focus being is this the guy who did it?”
    The court found that the issue was whether counsel should have raised the issues to the
    trial court in the motion for a judgment of acquittal and on appeal.
    Trial counsel testified further that the evidence showed Ms. Williams was not in
    actual possession of the items taken during the incident but that Ms. Williams was in
    constructive possession because she was inside the apartment. Counsel agreed that if Ms.
    Williams had not been in constructive possession, the charge regarding Ms. Williams
    would have been dismissed as a matter of law, which would have decreased the
    Petitioner’s sentence by twelve years.
    -13-
    On cross-examination, trial counsel testified that three people were involved in the
    home invasion and that two people were prosecuted. Counsel agreed the victims testified
    that all three perpetrators possessed firearms and ransacked the apartment. Counsel
    stated that Mr. Matthews was struck in the head as the perpetrators were “on the way to
    the door.” Counsel agreed Mr. Matthews was a large person who could have “protected
    the women or tried to stop” the perpetrators.
    The post-conviction court entered a written order denying relief. Relative to
    whether trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to “argue/litigate the
    sufficiency question(s) to the jury,” the court determined that counsel made reasonable
    tactical decisions not to “argue whether the State proved the elements of each indicted
    offense,” based upon the chosen defense of mistaken identity. The court stated, “If one’s
    client was not present and took no part in the crime or crimes, it matters not what
    occurred at the scene of the crime.”
    Relative to whether trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
    “raise/argue the sufficiency question to the trial court” in a motion for a judgment of
    acquittal and on appeal, the post-conviction court determined that the Petitioner’s reliance
    on State v. Owens, 20, S.W.3d 634, 637 (Tenn. 2000), and State v. Swift, 
    308 S.W.3d 827
    , 829 (Tenn. 2010), was misplaced and “easily distinguishable from the facts of this
    case.” The court, relying on State v. Henderson, 
    531 S.W.3d 687
    (Tenn. 2017),
    determined that it was reasonable to infer from the evidence that the Petitioner and the
    other perpetrators each had “a continuous larcenous intent” at the time Mr. Matthews was
    struck. The court determined that Swift and Owens would have been controlling authority
    at the time of the Petitioner’s trial and that trial counsel could not be faulted for not
    having the benefit of Henderson. The court concluded that counsel had not provided
    ineffective assistance.
    Relative to whether trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
    allege in a motion for a judgment of acquittal and on appeal that insufficient evidence
    supported the aggravated robbery of Ms. Williams, the post-conviction court determined
    that Ms. Williams was present inside the apartment when multiple armed perpetrators
    entered the apartment and took multiple items at gunpoint. The court found that the
    evidence supported the conviction. The court concluded that counsel had not provided
    ineffective assistance. This appeal followed.
    Post-conviction relief is available “when the conviction or sentence is void or
    voidable because of the abridgement of any right guaranteed by the Constitution of
    Tennessee or the Constitution of the United States.” T.C.A. § 40-30-103 (2012). A
    petitioner has the burden of proving his factual allegations by clear and convincing
    evidence. 
    Id. § 40-30-110(f)
    (2012). A post-conviction court’s findings of fact are
    binding on appeal, and this court must defer to them “unless the evidence in the record
    preponderates against those findings.” Henley v. State, 
    960 S.W.2d 572
    , 578 (Tenn.
    -14-
    1997); see Fields v. State, 
    40 S.W.3d 450
    , 456-57 (Tenn. 2001). A post-conviction
    court’s application of law to its factual findings is subject to a de novo standard of review
    without a presumption of correctness. 
    Fields, 40 S.W.3d at 457-58
    .
    To establish a post-conviction claim of the ineffective assistance of counsel in
    violation of the Sixth Amendment, a petitioner has the burden of proving that (1)
    counsel’s performance was deficient and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the
    defense. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984); see Lockhart v. Fretwell,
    
    506 U.S. 364
    , 368-72 (1993). The Tennessee Supreme Court has applied the Strickland
    standard to an accused’s right to counsel under article I, section 9 of the Tennessee
    Constitution. See State v. Melson, 
    772 S.W.2d 417
    , 419 n.2 (Tenn. 1989).
    A petitioner must satisfy both prongs of the Strickland test in order to prevail in an
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim. 
    Henley, 960 S.W.2d at 580
    . “[F]ailure to prove
    either deficiency or prejudice provides a sufficient basis to deny relief on the ineffective
    assistance claim.” Goad v. State, 
    938 S.W.2d 363
    , 370 (Tenn. 1996). To establish the
    performance prong, a petitioner must show that “the advice given, or the services
    rendered . . . , are [not] within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal
    cases.” Baxter v. Rose, 
    523 S.W.2d 930
    , 936 (Tenn. 1975); see 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690
    . The post-conviction court must determine if these acts or omissions, viewed in light
    of all of the circumstances, fell “outside the wide range of professionally competent
    assistance.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690
    . A petitioner “is not entitled to the benefit of
    hindsight, may not second-guess a reasonably based trial strategy by his counsel, and
    cannot criticize a sound, but unsuccessful, tactical decision.” Adkins v. State, 
    911 S.W.2d 334
    , 347 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1994); see Pylant v. State, 
    263 S.W.3d 854
    , 874 (Tenn.
    2008). This deference, however, only applies “if the choices are informed . . . based upon
    adequate preparation.” Cooper v. State, 
    847 S.W.2d 521
    , 528 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992).
    To establish the prejudice prong, a petitioner must show that “there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
    would have been different.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    . “A reasonable probability is a
    probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” 
    Id. I. Especially
    Aggravated Robbery
    The Petitioner contends that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing
    to challenge the especially aggravated robbery conviction on the basis that the force used
    to inflict serious bodily injury upon Mr. Matthews did not occur until after the theft had
    been completed. The State responds that counsel was not ineffective in this regard
    because “the law regarding the timing of the serious bodily injury” was not resolved until
    after the Petitioner’s trial.
    -15-
    As this court stated in its previous opinion in this post-conviction matter, “[t]he
    issue of whether the evidence is sufficient to establish a defendant’s identity as the
    perpetrator is distinct from whether trial counsel provided deficient performance by
    failing to challenge a conviction on a specific basis.” William Boatwright, 
    2018 WL 2324369
    , at *8. In the appeal from the conviction proceedings, trial counsel contended
    that the evidence was insufficient to support the Petitioner’s convictions, generally,
    because the “only evidence linking him to the crimes [was] the uncorroborated testimony
    of his alleged accomplice, James Cade.” William Ray Boatwright, 
    2013 WL 7757787
    , at
    *6. Counsel argued that the photograph lineup was flawed and that the Petitioner’s face
    was never seen during the incident, asserting that the Petitioner’s identity was not
    sufficiently established by the evidence. This court’s analysis of the sufficiency of the
    evidence was limited to whether codefendant Cade’s identification of the Petitioner was
    supported by sufficient independent evidence, and this court concluded that the testimony
    of the victims supported the identity of the Petitioner. This court did not consider
    whether the State presented sufficient evidence of the individual elements of the
    conviction offenses because such an allegation was not raised on appeal. See 
    id. at *6-7.
    To the extent that the post-conviction court denied relief on the basis that sufficiency of
    the evidence was raised in the appeal from the conviction proceedings, this court based
    its determination upon the Petitioner’s limited challenge to the sufficiency of the identity
    evidence.
    As relevant here, especially aggravated robbery is a robbery accomplished with a
    deadly weapon and in which the victim suffers serious bodily injury. T.C.A. § 39-13-403
    (2018). Robbery is defined as “the intentional or knowing theft of property from the
    person of another by violence or putting the person in fear.” 
    Id. § 39-13-403
    (2018). A
    deadly weapon includes “[a] firearm or anything manifestly designed, made or adapted
    for the purpose of inflicting death or serious bodily injury[.]” 
    Id. § 39-11-106(a)(5)
    (Supp. 2011) (subsequently amended). Serious bodily injury includes bodily injury that
    involves a substantial risk of death. 
    Id. § 39-11-106(a)(34)(A).
    In State v. Owens, 
    20 S.W.3d 634
    , 641 (Tenn. 2000), our supreme court
    determined that to sustain a robbery conviction, the State was required to establish that
    “the use of violence or fear must precede or be contemporaneous with the taking of
    property from the person.” The defendant in Owens shoplifted from a retail store and
    fled the scene. After running approximately five blocks, the defendant stopped, turned
    toward a store employee who had given chase, and displayed a box cutter to the
    employee. 
    Id. The court
    rejected the argument that the robbery statute included using
    force to retain property or to escape a crime scene. 
    Id. at 640.
    Our supreme court
    determined that the evidence was insufficient to establish that the act of violence or fear
    preceded or was contemporaneous with the taking and that the act of violence or fear was
    “temporally remote.” 
    Id. at 641.
    As a result, the court modified the defendant’s robbery
    conviction to theft. 
    Id. at 641-42.
    -16-
    In State v. Swift, 
    308 S.W.3d 827
    , 828-31 (Tenn. 2010), our supreme court
    considered whether the location of the use of violence or fear was relevant to
    distinguishing between theft and robbery, and it concluded that “the temporal proximity
    between the taking of property and the use of violence or fear is the sole relevant factor”
    in determining whether a robbery occurred. The defendant in Swift shoplifted from a
    retail store by taking items and placing them inside his pants, and when store employees
    attempted to stop the defendant from leaving the store with the merchandise, the
    defendant swung a knife at the employees, causing them to back away from the defendant
    out of fear. 
    Id. at 829.
    In determining that the evidence was insufficient to sustain an
    aggravated robbery conviction, the Swift court determined that the location of the use of
    violence or fear was irrelevant to whether a robbery occurred and that the critical inquiry
    was determining “when the taking was complete.” 
    Id. at 831.
    The Swift court
    determined that the taking was complete when the defendant “removed” and “concealed”
    items inside his pants, showing intent to deprive the retail store of its property, and that
    the use of violence “did not precede or occur contemporaneously with the removal and
    concealment” of the property. 
    Id. As a
    result, the court determined that a robbery had
    not occurred and modified the conviction offense from aggravated robbery to aggravated
    assault.” 
    Id. In Eldridge
    Hill v. State, No. W2009-01481-CCA-R3-PC, 
    2010 WL 4027728
    , at
    *1, 7 (Tenn. Crim. App. Oct. 14, 2010), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Feb. 17, 2011), this
    court considered a petitioner’s allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel in that
    counsel failed to challenge the petitioner’s especially aggravated robbery conviction on
    the basis that the robbery had been completed before the use of force resulting in serious
    bodily injury. The evidence showed that, while holding a gun to the victim’s head, the
    petitioner took money from the victim and attempted to ascertain the location of the
    victim’s marijuana. As the petitioner attempted to learn the location, the victim ran, and
    the petitioner “immediately” shot the victim. 
    Id. at *1,
    12. The Eldridge Hill court
    concluded, after considering Owens and Swift, that the act of violence, which resulted in
    serious bodily injury, occurred during the commission of the theft and that as a result, the
    evidence supported the especially aggravated robbery conviction. 
    Id. at *12.
    The court
    determined that although the petitioner had taken the victim’s money before the serious
    bodily injury was inflicted, the petitioner thought the victim was hiding marijuana and
    that the petitioner was attempting to take the marijuana when the victim ran and the
    petitioner shot him.1 
    Id. We note
    that subsequent to Eldridge Hill, this court has applied
    the same analysis. See State v. Harold Allen Vaughn, No. W2016-00131-CCA-R3-CD,
    
    2018 WL 1597421
    , at *4 (Tenn. Crim. App. Mar. 29, 2018) (concluding that the evidence
    was insufficient to show that serious bodily injury was inflicted before or during a
    1
    Although filed after the Petitioner’s August 2, 2011 trial, our supreme court discussed Eldridge Hill in
    State v. Henderson, 
    531 S.W.3d 687
    , 696-97 (Tenn. 2017). The court stated that this court correctly
    determined the evidence supported an especially aggravated robbery conviction based upon “not only the
    timing of the events at issue, but the [petitioner’s] intent during the course of conduct.” 
    Id. at 697.
    -17-
    robbery because the defendant shot the victim approximately thirty seconds after the
    defendant had taken all the victim’s property at gunpoint and after the defendant knew
    the victim did not have any additional property to take); State v. Charles Steven Shivers,
    No. M2009-02079-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2011 WL 6382552
    , at *7-8 (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 11,
    2011) (concluding that the act of violence, which resulted in serious bodily injury, was
    contemporaneous with the taking when the victim was shot before the perpetrators “rifled
    through” the victim’s pants and demanded that the victim identify the location of the
    victim’s money), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Apr. 11, 2012); see also State v. Jamaal
    Austin, No. W2017-01632-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2018 WL 4849141
    , at *6 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    Oct. 5, 2018), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Feb. 25, 2019).
    After the Petitioner’s trial, a panel of this court in State v. Antonio Henderson and
    Marvin Dickerson, No. W2015-00151-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2016 WL 3390627
    , at *7 (Tenn.
    Crim. App. June 10, 2016), considered, in relevant part, the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting an especially aggravated robbery conviction. The panel concluded that
    serious bodily injury could be inflicted before, during, or after the taking of property from
    a person. In reversing this conclusion, our supreme court determined that none of the
    language in the especially aggravated robbery statute supports the determination that
    serious bodily injury could be inflicted after the conclusion of the taking accomplished
    with a deadly weapon. 
    Henderson, 531 S.W.3d at 697
    . In fact, our supreme court stated
    that this court’s holding “adopted the continuous offense theory that the Owens court
    rejected.” The court concluded that
    robbery accomplished with a deadly weapon is complete once the accused
    has completed his theft of the property he intended to steal. If the victim
    suffers serious bodily injury during the commission of the robbery, the
    offense may constitute especially aggravated robbery. It is appropriate to
    consider the accused’s conduct and intent when determining whether the
    underlying theft has been completed.
    
    Id. at 698.
    (Emphasis added). In applying Owens and Swift, the court reiterated that “the
    ‘temporal proximity’ required by the robbery offenses would focus . . . on the
    circumstances indicative of the defendant’s conduct and the intent to determine whether,
    at the moment in time at issue, the defendant has definitively completed every element of
    the underlying theft,” which includes an analysis of whether the defendant had completed
    the “theft of all the property he intended to steal.” 
    Id. at 696.
    The parties do not dispute that Mr. Matthews suffered serious bodily injury.
    Therefore, the critical inquiry in this case is whether trial counsel provided deficient
    performance by failing to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence of the Petitioner’s
    especially aggravated robbery conviction on the basis that the act of violence or force,
    which resulted in serious bodily injury to Mr. Matthews and elevated the charged offense
    to especially aggravated robbery, occurred after the taking was complete.
    -18-
    The trial evidence reflects that multiple armed men “rushed” into Ms. Hines’s
    apartment, that the men searched Mr. Matthews for money, that the men were
    unsuccessful in locating money, and that Mr. Matthews retrieved $200 from his pocket
    and threw the money on a table. Ms. Thompson testified that she hid behind a speaker
    during the incident but heard the men rummaging through the apartment before Mr.
    Matthews retrieved the money from his pocket. Ms. Thompson then heard one man
    instruct the others to take cigarettes before she heard the “sound of feet moving away.”
    After a period of silence, Ms. Thompson heard one man say, “[S]orry I got to do this to
    you, Cuz.” Ms. Hines similarly testified that “just before” the men left, she heard one
    man say, “I hate to do you like this, Cuz.” Ms. Hines said that she next heard Mr.
    Matthews moaning.
    Ms. Williams witnessed the entire incident from her vantage point and testified
    that after the men forced their way into the apartment, she stood against a wall. She saw
    two men run to the back of the apartment while two men remained in the front of the
    apartment. She stated that the men in the back made noises as though they were “tearing
    rooms apart,” that one of the men who remained in the front asked her questions, and that
    the two men in the back returned to the front. Ms. Hines said that after the two men
    returned to the front of the apartment and “the men were heading out the door,” the man
    who had asked her questions “turned back” and said, “I hate to do this to you, Cuz,”
    before assaulting Mr. Matthews. Ms. Williams testified that “[Mr.] Matthews had
    already given his money” to the Petitioner before the assault. In addition to the cigarettes
    and Mr. Matthews’s money, the victims realized after the incident that a camcorder and a
    PlayStation console had been taken. Codefendant Cade testified that the Petitioner
    admitted striking Mr. Matthews on the head with a pistol “so he couldn’t remember
    nothing” because Mr. Matthews “had gotten too close” when the Petitioner took the
    money.
    As a result, the trial evidence reflects that the perpetrators had taken all of the
    property they intended to take and were leaving the apartment when the Petitioner turned
    and struck Mr. Matthews. The taking was complete at the time of the force used to inflict
    serious bodily injury. Likewise, the intent behind the force was not intended to
    accomplish a theft or taking. The intent of the force was to prevent Mr. Matthews from
    identifying the Petitioner and, therefore, to prevent the Petitioner’s prosecution.
    Furthermore, we disagree with the post-conviction court’s determination that the
    Petitioner’s reliance on Owens and Swift is misplaced. Although the offenses in Owens
    and Swift occurred in retail establishments, Swift made clear that the location of where the
    events occur is irrelevant. 
    Swift, 308 S.W.3d at 831
    . The critical inquiry of any robbery
    offense is “when the taking was complete.” 
    Id. Owens and
    Swift had been published
    before the Petitioner’s trial and provided a legal basis for challenging the sufficiency of
    the evidence of all robbery offenses. Furthermore, this court’s opinion in Eldridge Hill,
    -19-
    applying the principles of Owens and Swift to especially aggravated robbery and to the
    very issue in this case, was likewise available at the time of the Petitioner’s trial.
    The record reflects that trial counsel testified at the initial post-conviction hearing
    that he was aware the robbery statute stated the force or act of violence must precede or
    be concurrent with the taking. However, when asked about his familiarity with Owens
    and Swift, counsel stated that “he had not been presented with that issue and was unaware
    of the issue at the time of the Petitioner’s trial.” Counsel testified that the critical issue
    and the chosen defense theory was the identity of the Petitioner as one of the perpetrators,
    not whether the elements of each offense were established beyond a reasonable doubt.
    After this case was remanded to the post-conviction court, trial counsel’s initial
    testimony relative to his knowledge of Owens and Swift was vague, at best, but counsel
    admitted he was not aware of any issue related to the timing of the taking and the force,
    which resulted in serious bodily injury. Rather, counsel’s focus was only the Petitioner’s
    identity. Counsel rejected any notion that the timing of the force, which resulted in
    serious bodily injury, was an issue in this case because the incident occurred inside an
    apartment. However, based upon Swift, this is an inaccurate statement of the law.
    Furthermore, counsel admitted that he did not analyze the timing between the force
    resulting in serious bodily injury and the taking until after the initial post-conviction
    hearing and the previous appeal.
    As a result, the record does not support the post-conviction court’s determination
    that trial counsel made a strategic decision not to challenge the sufficiency of the
    evidence based upon the failure to prove that the use of force, which resulted in serious
    bodily injury, occurred before the taking was complete. We note that although the
    defense theory at the trial focused on the Petitioner’s identity, nothing prevented the
    defense from challenging the sufficiency of the convicting evidence as a matter of law
    after the State had rested its case-in-chief in a motion for a judgment of acquittal, after
    the trial in a motion for a new trial, and on appeal, if necessary. Counsel had an
    obligation to ensure that the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the
    offense, and counsel’s failure in this regard resulted in deficient performance. Based
    upon the state of the law at the time of the trial, which included Owens, Swift, and
    Eldridge Hill, the Petitioner has shown that counsel’s deficient performance resulted in
    prejudice because a reasonable probability exists that the trial court or this court would
    have acted in the Petitioner’s favor if the issue had been raised in the conviction
    proceedings.
    In reaching this conclusion, we have not overlooked the post-conviction court’s
    determination that trial counsel could not be faulted for not having the benefit of the most
    recent supreme court decision in Henderson. However, Henderson does not create new
    law but rather applies the legal principles in Owens and Swift, and it approves of this
    court’s opinion in Eldridge Hill, regarding the timing and intent of the act of violence, as
    -20-
    required for any robbery offense, in the context of especially aggravated robbery. The
    State was required to show at the time of the trial that the act of violence, which resulted
    in serious bodily injury, occurred before or during the taking of the property. The
    evidence does not support such a conclusion in this case. The witness testimony shows
    that the taking had been completed and that the men were leaving the apartment when the
    Petitioner turned and struck Mr. Matthews. The assault was not committed to effectuate
    the taking of Mr. Matthews’s money or the additional property because the taking was
    complete at the time Mr. Matthews was assaulted.
    We likewise reject the State’s argument that, at the time of the Petitioner’s trial,
    the question of when the serious bodily injury must occur had not been resolved. This
    argument lacks merits for three reasons. First, Owens and Swift, as the State notes in its
    brief, addresses the temporal connection between the taking and the act of violence in
    order for theft to constitute robbery. The State asserts, though, that Owens and Swift did
    not address the timing of the infliction of the bodily injury. Although our supreme court
    did not explicitly address when serious bodily injury must be inflicted in an especially
    aggravated robbery until Henderson, logic necessitates that bodily injury, serious or
    otherwise, cannot be inflicted without an act of violence or the use of force. Without an
    act of violence, serious bodily injury cannot be inflicted, and any robbery offense
    requires that the act of violence precede or be contemporaneous with a taking pursuant to
    Owens and Swift. The relevant distinction between robbery and especially aggravated
    robbery is that the force or act of violence results in serious bodily injury, not when
    serious bodily injury occurred. Therefore, the force or violence resulting in serious
    bodily injury must occur before the completion of the theft. Henderson states this
    principle explicitly and reiterates that the focus is on the temporal relationship between
    the act of violence, which in this case resulted in serious bodily injury, and the
    completion of the taking. Second, Eldridge Hill analyzed Owens and Swift in the context
    of especially aggravated robbery, which was filed before the Petitioner’s trial, and
    reached the same conclusion that our supreme court would later adopt in Henderson.
    Third, at the time of the trial, no conflict in the law existed.
    Furthermore the State’s reliance on State v. Mario Merritt, No. W2003-02868-
    CCA-R3-CD, 
    2004 WL 2726030
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Nov. 30, 2004), to show that the
    “timing issue” of the serious bodily injury had not been resolved at the time of the
    Petitioner’s trial is misplaced. The defendant in Mario Merritt attempted to leave a retail
    store without paying for various items he had in his possession. When a store employee
    confronted the defendant upon leaving, the defendant displayed a firearm and ordered the
    employee to get back and to get on the floor. A panel of this court upheld the defendant’s
    conviction for aggravated robbery after determining that the act of violence was
    contemporaneous with the taking. 
    Id. at *1-4.
    However, the Mario Merritt opinion was
    filed six years before Swift, which made clear that the act of violence or fear, such as
    displaying a weapon, must occur before the taking is complete. In applying Swift to the
    facts of Mario Merritt, the theft had been completed at the time of the act of violence or
    -21-
    fear. In any event, at the time of the Petitioner’s trial, the law was clear that the act of
    violence or fear required for any robbery offense must occur before the taking is
    complete, and the act of violence must precede the infliction of any injury.
    We conclude that the record does not support the post-conviction court’s
    determinations and that the Petitioner has established his claim of ineffective assistance
    of counsel. Therefore, the Petitioner is entitled to a limited motion for a new trial, at
    which time counsel is permitted to raise his sufficiency of the evidence claim relative to
    the especially aggravated robbery conviction for the trial court’s consideration.
    II.    Aggravated Robbery
    The Petitioner contends that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing
    to argue that the aggravated robbery conviction relative to Ms. Williams should have
    been dismissed. The Petitioner argues that $200 cash, a camcorder, cigarettes, and a
    PlayStation console were taken and that Ms. Williams did not possess the property when
    it was stolen. The State responds that counsel did not provide ineffective assistance
    because Ms. Williams constructively possessed the camcorder and cigarettes by virtue of
    her presence inside the apartment.
    The trial evidence reflects that Ms. Williams was a guest inside the apartment.
    The camcorder belonged to Ms. Hines, the owner of the apartment, and the evidence does
    not establish to whom the cigarettes or the PlayStation console belonged. Likewise, the
    evidence did not establish from where the PlayStation console, the camcorder, and the
    cigarettes were taken during the incident. Therefore, the critical inquiry is whether Ms.
    Williams constructively possessed the PlayStation console, the camcorder, and the
    cigarettes based upon her presence inside the apartment.
    A “taking from the person may be either actual or constructive. It is actual when
    the taking is immediately from the person and constructive when in the possession of the
    victim or in the victim’s presence.” State v. Miller, 
    608 S.W.2d 158
    , 160 (Tenn. 1980).
    “Constructive possession requires that a person knowingly have the power and the
    intention at a given time to exercise dominion and control over an object, either directly
    or through others. In essence, constructive possession is the ability to reduce an object to
    actual possession.” State v. Copeland, 
    677 S.W.2d 471
    , 476 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1984).
    “The mere presence of a person in an area where [an object is] discovered is not, alone,
    sufficient to support a finding that the person possessed the object.” State v. Cooper, 
    736 S.W.2d 125
    , 129 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1987).
    A robbery can involve the taking of property from the physical body of a person,
    in which a person has actual possession of the property, or from a person’s immediate
    presence or the general area in which the victim is located, in which the person has
    constructive possession of the property. See Jones v. State, 
    383 S.W.2d 20
    , 24 (Tenn.
    -22-
    1964) (concluding that the theft of items while the victim was restrained in another room
    constituted robbery); Morgan v. State, 
    415 S.W.2d 879
    , 881 (Tenn. 1967) (concluding
    that the “fact the goods and money were not taken from the person of the victims is no
    defense” to robbery when the victims were restrained while their house was ransacked);
    State v. Howard, 
    693 S.W.2d 365
    , 368 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1985) (citing 
    Jones, 383 S.W.2d at 20
    ; 
    Miller, 608 S.W.2d at 158
    ); see also State v. Nix, 
    922 S.W.2d 894
    , 900
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1995) (detailing the limitations of the phrase “from the person of
    another” in Tennessee jurisprudence).
    This court has concluded that in cases of multiple robbery convictions, “the proper
    unit of prosecution for robbery in Tennessee is the number of takings, i.e. the number of
    thefts,” and that defendants who put multiple victims in fear during the course of one
    theft may be convicted of aggravated assault in addition to the robbery conviction to
    acknowledge each victim. State v. Franklin, 
    130 S.W.3d 789
    , 797-98 (Tenn. Crim. App.
    2003); see State v. Michael Lebron Branham, No. E2014-02071-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2016 WL 106603
    , at *11 (Tenn. Crim. App. Jan. 8, 2016) (holding that convictions for aggravated
    robbery of a male victim and aggravated assault of a female victim were proper when
    money was only taken from the male victim); see also T.C.A. § 39-13-101, -102 (2018).
    The trial evidence reflects that although Ms. Williams was inside the apartment at
    the time of the incident, the evidence does not support a conclusion that Ms. Williams
    had any interest in or right to the items taken from the apartment, and her presence as a
    guest alone cannot establish that she had a greater right to possess the items than the
    Petitioner. See State v. Christopher Shane Harrell, No. E2005-01531-CCA-R3-CD,
    
    2007 WL 595885
    , at *2, 11 (Tenn. Crim. App. Feb. 26, 2007) (concluding that the victim
    of an especially aggravated robbery had constructive possession of a truck belonging to
    and being driven by her son because the truck was titled in her and her son’s names); see
    also State v. Joel Christian Parker, No. M2001-00773-CCA-R3-CD, 2002 WL31852850
    at *2-3 (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 18, 2002) (concluding that pawn shop employees have a
    possessory interest in the store items taken at gunpoint). Likewise, the lack of trial
    evidence regarding from where the items were taken precludes a conclusion that the
    items were taken from her immediate presence and control.
    Although the State asserts that Ms. Williams had a greater property right or
    interest in the camcorder and the cigarettes than the Petitioner, the evidence does not
    show that she had any authority to exercise control over the property, that she had any
    interest or right to the property, and that the property was within her immediate control.
    Ms. Williams was a bystander, and she had no more or less interest in the property than
    the Petitioner. Her mere presence during a home invasion does not create an interest
    superior to the Petitioner or anyone else. As a result, the record does not establish that
    Ms. Williams constructively possessed any of the property taken during the incident.
    -23-
    Trial counsel testified regarding the aggravated robbery conviction that he
    assumed everyone inside the apartment owned everything inside the apartment, although
    counsel knew Ms. Williams had been a guest at the time of the incident. Counsel thought
    that Ms. Williams had constructive possession of the items taken because she was inside
    the apartment, which is an inaccurate statement of the law. Although the chosen defense
    was mistaken identity, nothing prevented the defense from challenging the sufficiency of
    the convicting evidence as a matter of law after the State had rested its case-in-chief in a
    motion for a judgment of acquittal, after the trial in a motion for a new trial, and on
    appeal, if necessary. Counsel had an obligation to ensure that the State proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt each element of the offense, and counsel’s failure in this regard resulted
    in deficient performance.
    As a result, the record does not support the post-conviction court’s determination
    that trial counsel provided the effective assistance of counsel. Based upon the state of the
    law, the Petitioner has shown that counsel’s deficient performance resulted in prejudice
    because a reasonable probability exists that the trial court or this court would have acted
    in the Petitioner’s favor if the sufficiency issue had been raised in the conviction
    proceedings. The Petitioner has established his ineffective assistance claim. Therefore,
    the Petitioner is entitled to a limited motion for a new trial, at which time counsel is
    permitted to raise his sufficiency of the evidence claim relative to the aggravated robbery
    conviction for the trial court’s consideration.
    In consideration of the foregoing and the record as a whole, we reverse the
    judgment of the post-conviction court. We remand this case to the trial court for a
    limited motion for a new a trial at which time counsel is permitted to raise the sufficiency
    allegations addressed in this appeal and any additional issues that might arise in
    connection with these limited issues.
    ____________________________________
    ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., JUDGE
    -24-