Court of Criminal Appeals Overturns Possession of a Handgun Conviction
The concept of lesser included offenses is one that can at times prove confusing to defendants, attorneys, and, as the case of State v. Wellman shows, the courts. In Wellman, the defendant was arrested after an anonymous phone call informed police that the defendant was selling drugs in the Nashville area. The police investigated and arrested the defendant, and a search of his vehicle revealed a handgun in the automobile. Based on this finding the state charged him with, among other things, felony possession of a handgun, a Class E Felony in Tennessee. After a trial, he was convicted of, among other things, attempted felony possession of a handgun, a Class A misdemeanor.
On appeal, the Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that the evidence was insufficient to convict the defendant of attempted felony possession of a handgun. The court held that an essential element of the attempt offense was that the defendant had previously been convicted of “a felony involving the use or attempted use of force, violence, or a deadly weapon.” The Court found that the prosecution failed to prove this element, meaning that it was not a felony for the defendant to possess a handgun and thus he could not be convicted of the attempt offense of which he had been convicted in the trial court. Furthermore, the Court of Appeals held that there is no lesser included offense for attempted possession of a handgun, because the only possible lesser included offense contained an additional element. Where an offense contains an extra essential element than a more serious offense, the former cannot be a lesser included offense of the latter.
This case presents two key points for criminal defendants. The first is that for the state to be able to secure a conviction against a defendant for felony possession of a handgun, a fairly common charge, the state must prove at trial that the defendant had previously been convicted of the type of offense that made it a felony for the defendant to possess a handgun in the future. Failure to do so can result in a dismissal of a felony possession of a handgun conviction. The second is that defendants may be able to challenge a conviction in situations where they have been convicted of a lesser included offense that may not actually be a lesser included offense of the offense with which the defendant was originally charged. An experienced Sevierville criminal defense attorney will be familiar enough with the concept of lesser included offenses to assist defendants with such a challenge and provide them with the best chance of success.
Source: (State v. Wellman, 35 TAM 6-25, 12/7/09, Nashville, Witt, 12 pages.)