CASH v. THE STATE
S15A1247
Supreme Court of Georgia
October 19, 2015
297 Ga. 859 | 778 SE2d 785
BLACKWELL, Justice.
Appellant Larry Craig Cash was tried by a Haralson County jury and convicted of two murders. He appeals, contending that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his convictions and that the trial court mischarged the jury. Upon our review of the record and briefs, we see no error, and we affirm.1
1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence shows that Jimmy Wayne Wright was concerned that his wife, Karen, was having an affair with Jimmy Jackson. On the evening of March 2, 2005, the appellant drove Wright to a residence, where Wright retrieved a sawed-off shotgun from a vehicle parked outside the residence. Early the next morning, the appellant pulled his car onto the side of a road, called Jackson, told Jackson that he was having car trouble, and asked for help. Accompanied by Chris Cash2 and Tina Michelle McAdams, Jackson drove to the scene and parked his Ford Bronco on the side of the road, with its headlights directed to the open hood of the appellant‘s car. Jackson and Chris exited the Bronco, and McAdams stayed in the back seat of the Bronco. Jackson approached the appellant, who was standing near the front of his own car. The appellant explained that his headlights had gone out and that his car had “jumped time” and was backfiring.
Wright then emerged from some nearby trees, behind which he apparently had been hiding. Wright ran up and shot Jackson in the head with the sawed-off shotgun. Chris and the appellant immediately ran into a nearby field. Chris tripped and fell, and when he did, he looked back and saw Wright approaching the Bronco. Chris heard
The appellant then started the car (without any backfire), and at Wright‘s direction, the appellant drove the three men to the home of Wright‘s parents. Wright took Chris inside the home and directed the appellant to wash the car. Eventually, Chris and the appellant left the home of Wright‘s parents, and the appellant had Chris taken home. Chris then contacted law enforcement, and the appellant was arrested later that day. Law enforcement officers found a piece of Jackson‘s jaw (with teeth attached) at the base of the windshield of the appellant‘s car.
The appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction for the murder of McAdams because it was not reasonably foreseeable that she would be present with Jackson that night and that Wright would decide to shoot her. Those occurrences were intervening causes, he argues, and so he was not the proximate cause of her death, regardless of whether he had expected Wright to fight Jackson. It is true that proximate causation is the standard for liability in felony murder cases. State v. Jackson, 287 Ga. 646, 649 (2) (697 SE2d 757) (2010). But ”
2. The appellant claims that the trial court erred when it failed to instruct the jury on “intent to murder” because each of the felony murder counts of the indictment charged that he had committed aggravated assault by assaulting the victim “with the intent to murder and while assaulting [the victim] with a firearm, a deadly weapon.” In this way, the trial court impermissibly amended the indictment and also undermined his defense, the appellant argues, because he attempted to show at trial that he was unaware that Wright intended to kill Jackson.
The aggravated assault statute authorizes conviction upon proof of one or more alternative methods of assault — such as “[w]ith intent to murder,”
Because of defense counsel‘s imputed knowledge of this rule, and because the indictment charged that the appellant caused the victims’ death by assaulting them with intent to murder and with a deadly weapon, the appellant was on notice that the State could prove his guilt of the felony murders in either of the ways alleged in the indictment. See Huntley v. State, 271 Ga. 227, 229 (2) (518 SE2d 890) (1999); Stander, 226 Ga. App. at 497 (1). See also Scott v. State, 274 Ga. 153, 154 (2) (549 SE2d 338) (2001) (“unlike... Harwell [v. State, 270 Ga. 765 (512 SE2d 892) (1999)], the trial court did not instruct the jury on an alternative method of committing aggravated assault that was not alleged in the indictment“); Minter v. State, 170 Ga. App. 801, 802 (1) (318 SE2d 226) (1984) (“This is not a case where the indictment stated the offense with unnecessary particularity.... Rather, the indictment described two separate ways in which the crime could be committed; proof of either would constitute the crime with which [the appellant] was charged.” (Punctuation omitted.)). Although the
(4) A person or persons without legal justification by discharging a firearm from within a motor vehicle toward a person or persons.
3. Last, the appellant contends that the trial court erred when, over his objection, it declined to give his requested jury charge on the lesser included offense of involuntary manslaughter.5 Such a jury charge was authorized, the appellant claims, by evidence that at the time the assaults took place, he thought there would be only some sort of fight and he was unaware that Wright was in possession of a weapon. It is true that “a charge on involuntary manslaughter should
A defendant who lacks knowledge that his co-defendant possessed the gun that was used to commit an aggravated assault may nevertheless be a party to the aggravated assault. See Cornette v. State, 295 Ga. App. 877, 881-883 (3) (673 SE2d 531) (2009). To the extent that the evidence shows (as the jury obviously concluded it did) that the appellant and Wright shared a criminal intent to commit an assault upon Jackson, the appellant is chargeable with the foreseeable acts undertaken by Wright in the furtherance of that shared intent, even if Wright did something or employed some instrument that the appellant subjectively did not expect. And even assuming that the appellant did not know that Wright was armed with a shotgun, it certainly is foreseeable that an assault in the circumstances presented here — an early-morning ambush on the side of a road to which the victims were lured unwittingly — might involve the use of a deadly weapon and may result in serious injury or loss of life. Accordingly, when Wright employed a deadly weapon to assault, the appellant was chargeable with that use of a deadly weapon, so long as he and Wright shared a common intent to assault. On these facts, the appellant either was a party to murder and aggravated assault, or he was guilty of no crime at all. See Igidi v. State, 251 Ga. App. 581, 586 (4) (554 SE2d 773) (2001); Hopkins v. State, 227 Ga. App. 567, 568 (1) (489 SE2d 368) (1997), overruled on other grounds, Mullins v. State, 270 Ga. 450, 451 (2) (511 SE2d 165) (1999). Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it decided not to charge the jury on involuntary manslaughter.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED OCTOBER 19, 2015.
Jimmonique R. S. Rodgers, Long D. Vo, for appellant.
