Court Opinion

ID: 1080600
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:41:59.600583+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:06:15.308475
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF
              TENNESSEE
                  AT NASHVILLE                               FILED
           SEPTEMBER 1999 SESSION
                                                            November 24, 1999
                                                            Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                                                           Appellate Court Clerk
CHARLES DWIGHT FARRAR,             *       C.C.A. #
01C01-9810-CC-00393

              Appellant,           *       BEDFORD COUNTY
VS.                                *       Honorable Thomas A. Smith, Judge

STATE OF TENNESSEE,                *       (Post-Conviction Relief)

              Appellee.            *

FOR THE APPELLANT:                        FOR THE APPELLEE:

HERSHELL KOGER                             PAUL G. SUMMERS
135 N. First Street, Suite E               Attorney General & Reporter
Pulaski, TN 38478
                                           LUCIAN D. GEISE
                                           Assistant Attorney General
                                           425 Fifth Avenue North
                                           Nashville, TN 37243

                                           WILLIAM MICHAEL McCOWN
                                           District Attorney General

                                           ROBERT G. CRIGLER
                                           Assistant District Attorney
                                           One Public Square, Suite 300
                                           Shelbyville, TN 37160

OPINION FILED: _______________

       AFFIRMED

JOHN EVERETT WILLIAMS,
Judge

                                    OPINION
       The petitioner, Charles Dwight Farrar, appeals from the Bedford County
Circuit Court’s order dismissing, after an evidentiary hearing, his petition for post-
conviction relief. The petitioner pled guilty to twelve counts and received an

effective sentence of twenty years in the Tennessee Department of Correction.

His petition alleged that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that
his plea was not knowing and willing. We AFFIRM the trial court’s judgment.

                                  BACKGROUND
       At a plea acceptance hearing and sentencing on March 17, 1997, the

petitioner pled guilty to the following offenses and sentences:

       (1)  forgery, a Class E felony, for two years;
       (2)  burglary, a Class D felony, for three years;
       (3)  theft, a Class D felony, for three years;
       (4)  theft, a Class E felony, for two years;
       (5)  theft, a Class D felony, for four years;
       (6)  theft, a Class D felony, for four years;
       (7)  theft, a Class E felony, for one year;
       (8)  theft, a Class A misdemeanor, for eleven months, twenty-nine
            days;
       (9) driving on a revoked license, a Class B misdemeanor, for six
            months;
       (10) evading arrest in auto, a Class E felony, for two years;
       (11) reckless endangerment, a Class E felony, for two years;
       (12) reckless endangerment, a Class E felony, for one year;
       (13) jail escape, a Class E felony, for two years; and
       (14) vandalism, a Class E felony, for one year.

Counts one through five, counts eleven and twelve, and count fourteen were

imposed consecutively, and the remaining counts concurrently, for an effective
sentence of twenty years. Under the agreement, he was sentenced as a Range I

offender, although he qualified for Range II status.

       Dr. Pruett provided care for the petitioner at the Riverbend Maximum

Security Institution. The record includes a letter stating the results of Dr. Pruett’s

evaluation, conducted at the petitioner’s request, on January 12, 1997. At a
deposition on August 3, 1998, Dr. Pruett testified that he evaluated the petitioner

at the petitioner’s request so that he could enter a plea. Dr. Pruett established

that the petitioner understood the functions and roles of the judge, the jury, and

other components of the legal system. Dr. Pruett further determined that the
petitioner understood the nature of the charges and the consequences of his

plea. Despite previous borderline personality diagnosis and micropsychotic

episodes, the petitioner was competent. Specifically, Dr. Pruett noted that during
the evaluation the petitioner exhibited neither homicidal ideation nor suicidal

ideation nor any other form of psychosis.

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       At the sentencing hearing, the trial judge asked the petitioner if he had

read the plea agreement. The petitioner answered that he had not read the

agreement but that his attorney had read the pertinent documents to him and
that he understood them. The petitioner further stated that he was satisfied with

his representation, that he had no witnesses for a trial, and that his attorney

maintained regular contact. This contact comprised telephone discussions and
visits at both the jail and the penitentiary. The petitioner also stated to the trial

judge, on his own and not through counsel, that he understood that he needed to

request pre-trial sentence credits from the judge. These credits reduced his
sentence by sixteen months.

       The petitioner then filed a pro se petition for post-conviction relief and was
appointed counsel. At the hearing on the petition, the petitioner testified to his

history of unusual behavior. The petitioner further testified that on the morning of

his pleas the Bedford County Sheriff had threatened to charge his wife for

assisting him in escaping and fleeing law authorities if he did not accept the

twenty-year sentence. However, he then testified that he thought he was

agreeing to an eight-year sentence. The petitioner said that he had secretly

stockpiled daily dosages of Thorazine until he had accumulated 1500 milligrams

and that he had taken them the morning before his pleas because he was
suicidal and depressed. He testified that he told his attorney at the hearing that

he was over-medicated, and in his response his attorney said, “Don’t worry about

it, it will be all right.” The petitioner claimed to remember some, but not all,
portions of his testimony and statements under oath to the judge at the

sentencing hearing.

       Mr. Dearing, the petitioner’s trial counsel, testified at the hearing that he

had repeatedly contacted the petitioner: He had spoken with him while he was

on bond, he had certainly spoken with him at the jail, and had phoned him “many

more times than three.” Mr. Dearing testified that he spoke with all the law
enforcement officials involved in the various cases prior to the plea. He testified

that he advised the petitioner that until the petitioner was declared competent the

case would not return to the court. In 1996, the petitioner had been declared

incompetent to stand trial, in that he did not understand the nature and

                                          -3-
consequences of his charges and could not assist or advise his counsel.

Dearing testified that he did not coerce the petitioner into entering the plea.

Dearing also said that the petitioner contacted him after the sentencing hearing
and asked if his assistance in solving some unsolved robberies would reduce his

sentence.

       Joe Carthon, an officer with the Tennessee Department of Correction,

testified that he knew the petitioner for at least one year. As escort officer,

Carthon was involved with transporting the petitioner to court on the day of the
hearing. Carthon testified that the petitioner exhibited no signs of agitation or

excessive anxiety on that date.

       Dr. Rokeya Farooque, a psychiatrist and professor in the Department of

Psychiatry at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, testified that she reviewed

the written transcript and records of the sentencing and plea hearings and

evaluated the petitioner in August 1997. Dr. Farooque testified that a person

without tolerance for Thorazine who takes 1500 milligrams of that drug exhibits

side effects: extreme grogginess; inability to stay awake; and little, if any, ability

to rationally communicate. She testified that despite the petitioner’s claim that

he had taken the drug on the date in question, the record evidences his active

and lucid participation rather than any dysfunction. For example, Farooque

noted the trial court’s inquiry, “During that time you have discussed with Mr.

Dearing and he has discussed with you the possible defenses, if any, you might
have to all of the cases that you have pled guilty to?,” to which the petitioner

responded, “Could you say that again, Your Honor?” The judge repeated the

question, albeit somewhat modified, after which the petitioner answered in the
affirmative. Farooque distinguished this exchange from that expected of one

under the influence of Thorazine, in which a simple “yes” or “no” would be

expected.

                                     ANALYSIS

       The petitioner asserts that the trial court erred by dismissing his petition

for post-conviction relief. That petition asserted that the petitioner’s counsel was

                                          -4-
ineffective and that the petitioner did not knowingly and willingly enter his pleas. 1
The trial court denied the petition after a hearing. A petitioner bears the burden

of proving his factual allegations by a preponderance of the evidence. See

Brooks v. State, 756 S.W.2d 288, 289 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988).

                             Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
        A petitioner seeking relief because of ineffective assistance of counsel

must first establish that the services rendered or the advice given was below “the

range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.” Baxter v. Rose,

523 S.W. 23 930, 936 (Tenn. 1975); see also Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.

at 668 (1984). The petitioner must then demonstrate that the alleged

deficiencies “actually had an adverse effect on the defense.” Strickland, 466
U.S. at 693. A reasonable probability must exist that but for counsel’s error the

result of the proceeding would have been different. Id. at 694. The petitioner

must establish both factors. Moreover, on appeal the findings of fact established

by the trial court are conclusive, and this Court will not disturb these findings

unless the evidence contained in the record preponderates against them. See

Rhoden v. State, 816 S.W.2d 56, 60 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991). Further, failure of

a particular strategy or tactic pursued by defense counsel does not establish

ineffective assistance of counsel. This Court must defer to trial strategy and
tactical choices based on adequate preparation. See id. at 60-61; Cooper v.

State, 847 S.W.2d 521, 528 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1992).

        The trial court credited the testimony for the petitioner’s trial counsel,

finding that counsel adequately investigated the cases and acted reasonably in

preparing defense. He interviewed witnesses identified by the petitioner and
concluded in most cases that their testimony was adverse. Similarly, the trial

court found that none of the witnesses could actually provide exculpatory

evidence. The trial court determined that the counsel’s performance exceeded

the applicable standards. Further, the petitioner’s statements at the sentencing
hearing and plea acceptance hearing indicate that the petitioner was satisfied

   1
     The actual petition comprised eight separate allegations, which the petitioner’s counsel at the
evidentiary hearing characterized as falling within these two general categories.

                                                -5-
with counsel’s performance. This Court also notes that counsel testified at the

hearing that he maintained contact with the petitioner.

       The petitioner offers only his uncorroborated testimony in support of his

allegations of ineffectiveness. He has not satisfied the burden of proof

necessary for reversal.

                             Knowing and Willing Plea

       The petitioner’s assertions regarding his “knowingly and willingly” offering

his pleas comprise two primary issues: alleged Thorazine over-medication on the
day in question and his misunderstanding of the proceedings. The trial court

found that even if the petitioner had consumed the 1500 milligrams of Thorazine

as claimed, Dr. Farooque’s testimony compelled the conclusion that any such

medication did not prevent the petitioner from understanding the proceedings.

Further, that court noted counsel’s testimony that the petitioner did not seem

under an influence. Counsel also denied being told by the petitioner that he was

over-medicated.

       Also, the petitioner asserted that he was coerced by his attorney into

entering the pleas. Counsel testified that he did not coerce the petitioner.

Further, under direct questioning during the sentencing hearing, the trial judge
established that the petitioner had not been coerced to enter the pleas.

       We have reviewed the sentencing hearing records provided to this Court
and noted the petitioner’s participation. The petitioner testified under oath that he

understood the proceedings and agreed with the sentences. At one point, the

judge asked him if he had read the plea agreement, and the petitioner corrected

the judge: He had not read the agreement, but counsel had read to him the
pertinent documents and he understood their contents. The petitioner also, at

two points in that proceeding, requested that the judge address the issue of pre-

trial credits and sentence reduction. He made these inquiries personally and not

through counsel. The trial court correctly found that the petitioner was an active

                                         -6-
and knowing participant in his plea agreements. We do not find the requisite

proof necessary to interfere with the trial court’s judgment.

                                  CONCLUSION

       We AFFIRM the trial court’s order dismissing the petition.

                                          ______________________________
                                          JOHN EVERETT W ILLIAMS, Judge

CONCUR:

____________________________
JOHN H. PEAY, Judge

___________________________
DAVID H. WELLES, Judge

                                         -7-