State of Tennessee v. Gussie Willis Vann - Dissenting
I agree with the majority’s resolution of every issue in this case but one: the effect of the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on second-degree murder. The majority concludes that the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the offense of second-degree murder is not error because the evidence in the record does not support that offense. Because I find the evidence can indeed support a conviction of seconddegree murder, I respectfully dissent. |
McMinn | Supreme Court | |
Robert L. Delaney v. Brook Thompson, et al.
This Court has been appointed by the Governor to decide the case of Delaney v. Thompson, et al., in which the plaintiff challenges the constitutionality of the uniquely statutory merit selection system for appellate judges called the Tennessee Plan. Rather than contend with the constitutional issues, the majority, deciding this case by statutory construction, utilizes a construction which reflects neither the meaning of the statute nor the positions of the parties. In doing so, the majority opinion neither clarifies issues of importance to the electorate and judiciary, nor discourages future litigation on the same issues. |
Supreme Court | ||
April Wallace, Vickie Guinn, et al., v. National Bank of Commerce, et al.
This case presents for review the decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the trial court's award of summary judgment for the defendants. The trial court found that the |
Shelby | Supreme Court | |
Deborah Lorraine Brooks v. Rickey Lamar Brooks - Dissenting
It is apparent that this Court has based its finding that Mr. Brooks is willfully and voluntarily underemployed simply on the fact that he, at one time, was more lucratively employed. Simply because a parent is not as lucratively employed as during the marriage, or for a time thereafter, no automatic inference that he or she is willfully and voluntarily underemployed should be drawn. We must remain cognizant of a parent’s right as a citizen to the pursuit of happiness and to the freedom to make reasonable employment decisions, while at the same time heeding the duty to support. |
Knox | Supreme Court | |
Dorothy Owens, as Conservator of Mary Francis King, et al. v. National Health Corporation, et al.
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Rutherford | Supreme Court | |
M2001-01866-CCA-R3-DD
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Supreme Court | ||
01C01-9606-CR-00230
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Supreme Court | ||
State of Tennessee v. John R. Farner, Jr.
The State of Tennessee has filed a petition to rehear asking this Court to reconsider certain |
Sullivan | Supreme Court |