Court Opinion

ID: 9912432
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-22 15:01:55.579785+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:59:21.345393
License: Public Domain

Rel: December 22, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern
Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts,
300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other
errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.

         SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
                             OCTOBER TERM, 2023-2024

                                _________________________

                                      SC-2023-0733
                                _________________________

                       Ex parte James Lavondria Tunstall

                  PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI
                 TO THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

                         (In re: James Lavondria Tunstall

                                                  v.

                                     State of Alabama)

                     (Mobile Circuit Court: CC-19-2458;
                  Court of Criminal Appeals: CR-2022-0792)

STEWART, Justice.

       WRIT DENIED. NO OPINION.

       Shaw, Wise, Bryan, Sellers, Mendheim, and Mitchell, JJ., concur.

       Parker, C.J., dissents, with opinion, which Cook, J., joins.
SC-2023-0733

PARKER, Chief Justice (dissenting).

      I respectfully dissent. According to the facts before us, James

Lavondria Tunstall was at his grandmother's house with his girlfriend,

Trenell Evans. When Tunstall went outside to take Evans to get

breakfast, she told him that Jermond Perryman had just walked by and

called her a "b*tch." Tunstall and Evans walked to a grocery store

together to pick up breakfast immediately afterward. On the way, they

passed Perryman and another man. Evans asked if Perryman had called

her a "b*tch," which Perryman denied. Tunstall and Evans continued

toward the store. As Tunstall and Evans were coming back from getting

breakfast at the store, Tunstall saw three people, including Perryman,

looking at his grandmother's house. Tunstall testified that he went back

into the house. From inside the house, he could see the three men walking

toward the house. He said that he then went back outside and that

Perryman began shooting at him. Tunstall testified that he returned fire

with a .22-caliber rifle. During the exchange of gunfire, Perryman was

killed.

      Tunstall was indicted in the Mobile Circuit Court on one count of

intentional murder. Tunstall alleged that Perryman had fired first, and

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that Tunstall had returned fire to defend himself. Evidence at trial

indicated that both Perryman and Tunstall had fired at each other. The

evidence did not conclusively establish who had fired first. But the one

eyewitness to the incident (other than Tunstall) indicated that Perryman

had fired first. The record before this Court indicates that no evidence

was presented by the State tending to show that Tunstall had begun the

firing.

      At the close of the evidence, Tunstall requested a jury instruction

on self-defense. The State requested a jury instruction on the lesser-

included offense of heat-of-passion manslaughter. Tunstall objected,

arguing that Alabama law did not allow for a heat-of-passion-

manslaughter instruction in this case. The circuit court decided to

instruct the jury on both self-defense and heat-of-passion manslaughter.

      The jury convicted Tunstall of heat-of-passion manslaughter. The

circuit court sentenced him to 15 years and 1 day of imprisonment.

Tunstall appealed to the Court of Criminal Appeals, which affirmed his

conviction by unpublished memorandum, see Tunstall v. State (No. CR-

2022-0792, June 16, 2023), ____ So. 3d ____ (Ala. Crim. App. 2023) (table).

He now petitions this Court for certiorari review. Specifically, Tunstall

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claims that the Court of Criminal Appeals' affirmance of the circuit

court's judgment conflicts with three prior decisions of that court and one

prior decision of this Court. All four of those cases address the propriety

of jury instructions on self-defense or lesser-included offenses.

     As I see it, there are two factual possibilities presented by the Court

of Criminal Appeals' decision: either Tunstall fired first or Perryman

fired first. In either case, the decision below affirming Tunstall’s

conviction appears to conflict with prior decisions of this Court and the

Court of Criminal Appeals.

     If Tunstall fired first, then the question is what provocation he had

to do so. The facts before us indicate that it could have been a verbal

exchange between Tunstall and Perryman after Perryman allegedly

called Tunstall's girlfriend a "b*tch." But if that verbal exchange was the

provocation for Tunstall's firing, it would be insufficient to reduce

Tunstall's crime to heat-of-passion manslaughter. This Court and the

Court of Criminal Appeals have held that "[m]ere words, no matter how

insulting, never reduce a homicide to manslaughter." Mitchell v. State,

60 Ala. 26, 32 (1877); Fuller v. State, 231 So. 3d 1207, 1218-19 (Ala. Crim.

App. 2015). Therefore, if Tunstall unlawfully fired first, his crime could

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not have been heat-of-passion manslaughter, but only intentional

murder.

     The State argued for the heat-of-passion-manslaughter instruction

based on the verbal exchange. The circuit court granted the State's

request for a heat-of-passion-manslaughter instruction because of

"evidence adduced or solicited by whoever it was that this exchange

happened …." It is hard to understand what exactly the circuit court

could have meant by "this exchange," if not the verbal exchange. The

Court of Criminal Appeals, in its unpublished memorandum, grappled

with this ambiguity and seemed to suggest that by "exchange" the circuit

court could have meant the exchange of gunfire. But if Tunstall fired first,

then that interpretation is untenable. An exchange of gunfire that

Tunstall himself began could not possibly have provoked him to begin it.

Tunstall could have been provoked by the exchange of gunfire only if

Perryman fired first. Therefore, either the heat-of-passion-manslaughter

instruction conflicts with Mitchell and Fuller or Perryman fired first. 1

     1  I note again that the Court of Criminal Appeals cited no evidence
in its unpublished memorandum tending to show that Tunstall fired first.
The evidence it cited in its unpublished memorandum uniformly
indicates that Perryman fired first. I address the theory that Tunstall
fired first because it could have been the theory under which the circuit
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      If Perryman fired first, then the source of Tunstall's "heat of

passion" only could have been the gunshots from Perryman. This would

mean that the Court of Criminal Appeals' decision does not conflict with

Mitchell and Fuller; but then such a ruling would seriously conflict with

the law of self-defense in Alabama and two other prior decisions of the

Court of Criminal Appeals.

      The authority cited by the Court of Criminal Appeals on this point

deals with " ' " ' "blow[s] given, or apparently about to be given," ' " ' " not

"gunshots fired, or apparently about to be fired." Williams v. State, 675

So. 2d 537, 541 (Ala. Crim. App. 1996) (emphasis and citations omitted).

In other words, this authority deals with the use of deadly force in

response to the use of nondeadly force. Here, Tunstall used deadly force

in response to the use of deadly force. Under Alabama law, therefore,

Tunstall was presumed to be justified in using deadly physical force in

self-defense. See § 13A-3-23(a)(1), Ala. Code 1975 ("A person … is legally

presumed to be justified in using deadly physical force in self-defense …

court allowed the heat-of-passion-manslaughter instruction, although
the Court of Criminal Appeals seems to have affirmed the circuit court's
judgment on other grounds.
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if the person reasonably believes that another person is: (1) Using or

about to use unlawful deadly physical force." (emphasis added)).

      For the heat-of-passion-manslaughter instruction to be proper

under this theory, the circuit court needed sufficient evidence before it to

rebut the presumption of self-defense. See Pressley v. State, 770 So. 2d

115, 139 (Ala. Crim. App. 1999) ("A trial court has broad discretion in

formulating its jury instructions, provided those instructions accurately

reflect the law and the facts of the case." (emphasis added)), aff'd, 770 So.

2d 143 (Ala. 2000); Harbin v. State, 14 So. 3d 898, 908 (Ala. Crim. App.

2008) ("[A] trial court may … instruct the jury on a lesser-included

offense that is supported by the evidence, even over the objection of one

or both of the parties." (emphasis added)). The Court of Criminal Appeals'

mere speculation in its unpublished memorandum that the evidence

"could also be interpreted by the trier of fact as Tunstall believing that

he was about to be assaulted … and [shooting] … out of a sudden heat of

passion" is not evidence sufficient to overcome this statutory

presumption. And no facts properly before this Court directly oppose this

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presumption, let alone rebut it. In my opinion, Tunstall thus

demonstrates a strong likelihood of conflict with Pressley and Harbin.2

     To sum up, if Tunstall fired first, then the heat-of-passion-

manslaughter instruction was improper because it was based on the

presumption that Tunstall was provoked by words alone, which conflicts

with Mitchell and Fuller. If Perryman fired first, then it was improper

because it was unsupported by sufficient evidence to overcome the

statutory presumption of self-defense, which conflicts with Pressley and

Harbin. Either way, I think this Court ought to grant certiorari review.

     I also believe we should grant certiorari review in this case to

consider the Catch-22 in which the Court of Criminal Appeals' decision

seems to put persons who use a gun in self-defense and the apparent

conflict this causes with prior decisions. According to that decision, a

person who is being shot at cannot return fire without committing heat-

of-passion manslaughter, so long as the shooter misses them. That is, a

     2 The heat-of-passion-manslaughter instruction would also conflict
with Pressley and Harbin if Tunstall fired first. No evidence contained in
the record before this Court tends to prove that Tunstall fired first.
Therefore, even if this was the theory behind the circuit court's giving the
instruction, it is likewise unsupported by the evidence, and thus in
conflict with Pressley and Harbin.
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person can shoot back only once he has been shot because being shot at

and missed is merely an "assault" that does not necessarily or

presumptively support using lethal force in self-defense. I think such a

result is both unreasonable and irreconcilable with the statutory

presumption of self-defense in such cases under § 13A-3-23(a)(1).

     For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.

     Cook, J., concurs.

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