Tennessee Supreme Court Adopts Conditional “No Retreat” Analysis

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Tennessee Supreme Court Adopts Conditional “No Retreat” Analysis

USA -(Ammoland.com)- The Tennessee Supreme Court has issued a new opinion on the issue of when and under what circumstances the statutory “right” of self-defense is available. The opinion is State of Tennessee v. Antoine Perrier, W2015-01642-SC-R11-CD and was released on November 21, 2017.

 

As summarized by the Court, these are the issues:

We granted the defendant’s application for permission to appeal in this case with direction to the parties to particularly address the following issues: (1) the meaning of the phrase “not engaged in unlawful activity” in the self-defense statute, Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-11-611, and (2) whether the trial court or the jury decides whether the defendant was engaged in unlawful activity. We hold that the legislature intended the phrase “not engaged in unlawful activity” in the self-defense statute to be a condition of the statutory privilege not to retreat when confronted with unlawful force and that the trial court should make the threshold determination of whether the defendant was engaged in unlawful activity when he used force in an alleged self-defense situation. We further conclude that the defendant’s conduct in this case constituted unlawful activity for the purposes of this statute. * * * *  We affirm the judgments of the trial court and the Court of Criminal Appeals, albeit on separate grounds.

The key holding of this case may be that the Court concluded that a person who is not engaged in “unlawful activity” has no duty to retreat (assuming all other factors are satisfied) before resorting to deadly force in self-defense but that a person engaged in “unlawful activity” is in a different circumstance and that such person has an affirmative duty to retreat before resorting to deadly force in self-defense,

This differential duty arose from changes to Tennessee’s self-defense statute by the Legislature which should be re-evaluated and reconsidered.

In this case, the Court did not expand upon what activities fall within the scope of the Legislature’s poorly chosen phrase “engaged in unlawful activity”.  In the case, the defendant was referenced as being a felon in possession of a firearm and the court spent almost no time on the issue of whether that satisfied the term “engaged in unlawful activity”.   What the court held was simply if a defendant is engaged in “unlawful activity” that the duty to retreat is imposed and required but its not required otherwise.

So what is “unlawful activity” under the statute?  Would it include for example in a carjacking case not having current tags, an insurance card or even a valid driver’s license?  If you are at home, would “unlawful activity” include perhaps code violations that are “unlawful” such as perhaps having your grass be too tall in Nashville or parking on the grass rather than in a driveway?  The Court acknowledged but found it unnecessary to determine in this case whether there has to be a relationship between the unlawful activity and the self-defense claim:

The defendant maintains that any unlawful activity by a defendant asserting self-defense must have a causal nexus to his perceived need to defend himself. The State responds that the statutory language does not admit a reading that includes a causal nexus. It is unnecessary to resolve this issue to decide the case before us.
So, we are left to wonder whether matters such as being continuously in violation of a child support order (an “unlawful activity”) might deny someone the “no retreat” presumption when such status generally would have absolutely no relationship to a self-defense claim.

Yours,

John Harris
Executive Director
Tennessee Firearms Association

Tennessee Firearms AssociationP.S. If you want to wade in on the battle to elect someone to the office of governor (there is only one who supports Constitutional Carry), the State Senate and the State House in 2018 – candidates who put the constitution first and who are true public stewards of your rights, please take a moment and go to the TFA’s PAC website and make a donation so that we can raise the funds to restore our rights.

TFA Website: www.tennesseefirearms.com
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Timothy A Votaw

I am encouraged at the high level of common sense thinking and intellectual perception in comments here. It tells me we still have a core of wisdom where the 2nd Amendment and Castle Doctrine connect. The challenge: How in the hell do we persist in getting this sensible thinking back on the front burner in the face of completely-brainwashed courts like the Leftist automatons in the Ninth Circuit? We MUST prevail if we have any chance of defeating the destruction of our rights to protection from distinct criminal activity. How has it ever become even a question that a home… Read more »

tomcat

I am disappointed at how this bill reads. It has always been understood, in Tennessee, that stand your ground was the proper method of defending yourself especially on your own property. Passing this abortion makes it impossible to be sure where your rights are. The legislature is turning to the left and that is not a good sign. People of Tennessee need to go to the polls and place the RINO’s on permanent retirement.

Pistol Packin Preacher

Are yal going to let us talk or what

Brian

If you are a Tennessee firearms owner, please join the Tennessee Firearms Association. They are the only group with teeth to affect really firearms positivity in Tennessee. We saw in 2017 were the NRA helped pass a law to expand gun free zones, it is important to support an organization that is truly focused on the needs of Tennessee firearms owners.

Jeremy

Still too dangerous a ruling for my liking. The portion of the statement, “the statutory privilege not to retreat when confronted with unlawful force”, says it all. They think the state can decide when you are required to run away if your life is in danger or your rights are violated, that it is a “privilege” to stand your ground.

David

I had rather be judged by 12 than carried by six any day of the week

fsilber

Common sense suggests that it means that the encounter did not result because of unlawful activity on the part of the defender. It certainly would not apply to unlawful activity on the part of the defender of which the attacker was completely unaware.

Jim Macklin

I’m going to give my “legal opinion” and the disclaimer that IANAL and did not play one on any TV show. If you’re buying drugs and the dealer decides to carjack you at knife point/gun point because he likes your Benz, you’d better step on the gas before you shoot. If you’ve called a hooker to your hotel room and she brings her pimp to rob you, a court will say you asked for it. If you are stopped at a traffic light and some stranger approaches your car with gun in hand, stepping on the gas might be a… Read more »