In April 1989, Warren Jones was shot and killed by one of four armed men who confronted him and his companion and stole his automobile. Jones’s companion, Jeffrey O’Neal, was accosted by two of the four perpetrators and $60 was taken from him. In November 1995, a jury returned guilty verdicts against appellant James Chapman for malice murder, felony murder (aggravated assault and armed robbery being the underlying felonies) in connection with the death of Jones, two counts of armed robbery, and aggravated assault of O’Neal. The trial court sentenced appellant to life imprisonment for malice murder, imposed a consecutive 20-year term of imprisonment for the armed robbery of O’Neal, and determined that the remaining convictions merged. While appellant’s motion for new trial was pending, the trial court vacated the malice murder conviction and sentence and sentenced appellant to life imprisonment for felony murder. The trial court subsequently denied appellant’s motion for new trial, and appellant filed this appeal. 1
1. The surviving victim testified he and the murder victim were standing on opposite sides of the car they had just parked and exited after midnight near a Harwell Road nightclub in northwest Atlanta when four armed men surprised them. One man pointed a gun at the witness’s head while another poked him in the side with a sharp metal object and took $60 from him. The witness heard his friend *315 being beaten by the other perpetrators as they demanded the murder victim’s car keys, but the surviving victim was not permitted to look at the other side of the car. The victim/witness testified he was led to some bushes and forced to lie down in the bushes while the four men left, and he arose to find his bloodied friend lying in the street. The deputy chief medical examiner who performed the autopsy testified the victim died from a gunshot wound to his left side and had suffered multiple blunt force trauma to his head that indicated he was below his attackers. A small caliber C22-.25) bullet was recovered from the victim’s body.
In addition to the survivor’s testimony, the State presented as evidence appellant’s testimony at his preliminary hearing and two statements given by appellant, one to the Alabama police chief to whom he turned himself in over five years after the crimes were committed, and one to the Atlanta detective assigned to the case. In the statements, appellant admitted being with three other men who decided to rob two men who were exiting a car on Harwell Road. According to appellant’s statements, the other three men, two armed with guns and one with a screwdriver, approached the victims while appellant stayed in the perpetrators’ car. When appellant heard the murder victim struggling with one of the assailants, appellant, carrying a .22-caliber rifle, exited the car. After telling one of his colleagues to put the other victim in the bushes, appellant approached the murder victim who, while on his back on the ground, had grabbed the barrel of his assailant’s gun. Appellant pointed his rifle at the murder victim and told him to let go of the gun. The victim then grabbed appellant’s gun and pulled it, causing appellant to pull the trigger and the gun to fire, fatally wounding the victim. The perpetrators left the victim lying in the street and two of the men drove off in the victim’s car while the other two left in the car in which the foursome arrived. The evidence was sufficient to authorize appellant’s convictions for the felony murder/aggravated assault of victim Jones and the armed robbery of victim O’Neal.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Appellant contends his convictions cannot stand because they are based on his uncorroborated confessions.
“A
confession alone, uncorroborated by any other evidence, shall not justify a conviction.” OCGA § 24-3-53. “ ‘[C]orroboration of a confession in any particular satisfies the requirements of the statute. (Cit.)’ [Cit.]”
Miller v. State,
3. The trial court vacated appellant’s malice murder conviction and sentence, re-instated his felony murder conviction, and sentenced him thereon after appellant pointed out in his amended motion for new trial that the trial court had given an erroneous jury instruction when it told the jury it could infer intent to kill from appellant’s use of a deadly weapon and that it was within the jury’s discretion whether to make the inference. In
Harris v. State,
4. Appellant contends the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the crimes were committed in Fulton County.
4
Generally, a criminal action must be tried in the county in which the crime was committed (Ga. Const. 1983, Art. VI, Sec. II, Par. VI; OCGA § 17-2-2 (a)), and the State may establish venue by whatever means of proof are available to it, including direct and circumstantial evidence.
Jones v. State,
In the case at bar, the surviving victim and the City of Atlanta investigating police officer and detective testified the crime occurred at 1097 Harwell Road about 50 feet down the road from the Blue Flame Lounge, located at 1100 Harwell Road in Fulton County. There was no direct evidence that 1097 Harwell Road, where the victim’s body was found and where the crimes occurred, was located in Fulton County. Rather, the direct evidence established only that the lounge, a site near the murder scene, was located in Fulton County. Establishing the venue of a near-by site does not establish the venue of the murder site itself.
Jones v. State,
supra,
In addition to being authorized to find from the police officer’s testimony that he acted within his authority to investigate a crime that took place in Fulton County, the jury was also authorized to find from the testimony of the deputy chief medical examiner of Fulton County that the crime occurred in Fulton County. That witness testified that the victim’s body came to the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s offices because a deceased person in Fulton County whose death is not the result of natural causes is a case for the medical examiner. His testimony reflects the state of the law — the Fulton County Medical Examiner is a public official whose duties include the performance of autopsies on the bodies of deceased victims of violence occurring within Fulton County, the territorial jurisdiction of the Fulton County Medical Examiner. Ga. L. 1965, p. 2497; OCGA § 45-16-24 (a) (1). See also OCGA § 45-16-21 (1.1), (2), (8), (9), and (13), where “county medical examiner” is distinguished from “local,” “state,” and “regional” medical examiners. This “inference by narration,” dependent upon the credibility of the witness giving the testimony, the coherence of that testimony, the relevance of that testimony, and whether the witness is acting in character, is sufficient evidence from which the jury could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the crimes were committed in Fulton County, making venue in Fulton County proper.
5. Appellant sees reversible error in the trial court’s refusal to give jury instructions on voluntary manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, and reckless conduct.
(a) Appellant maintains that a charge on voluntary manslaughter was supported by his statements admitted into evidence that the rifle he pointed at the victim fired when the victim grabbed the barrel of the gun.
Voluntary manslaughter occurs when one kills another human being under circumstances which would otherwise be murder, if the killer “acts solely as the result of a sudden, violent, and irresistible passion resulting from serious provocation sufficient to excite such passion in a reasonable person. . . .” OCGA § 16-5-2 (a). Whether there is evidence to support a finding that the defendant acted “solely as the result of a sudden, violent, and irresistible passion resulting from a serious provocation” is a question of law. [Cit.]
Mack v. State,
(b) Appellant contends the evidence supported the giving of jury instructions on involuntary manslaughter and reckless conduct. However, when the victim is killed during an armed robbery, there is no involuntary manslaughter/unlawful act (reckless conduct). See
Rouse v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The crimes occurred on April 14, 1989. Appellant was arrested in November 1994 after he told an Alabama police chief of his involvement in the crimes. The Fulton County grand jury returned a true bill of indictment on February 14, 1995, and appellant’s trial commenced on November 6, 1995. It concluded on November 9 when the jury returned its guilty verdicts. Appellant was initially sentenced on November 13, 1995. He filed a motion for new trial on November 20,1995, and amended it on June 20, 2001. On August 23, 2001, the trial court vacated the sentence on the malice murder conviction and replaced it with a sentence of life imprisonment for the felony murder conviction. The trial court denied appellant’s amended motion for new trial on September 12, 2001, and appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on September 24. The case was docketed in this Court on October 30, 2001, and submitted for decision on the briefs.
Appellant’s trial took place approximately five and one-half years before the
Harris
decision in March 2001, but the
Harris
holding is expressly applicable to those cases pending on direct review or not yet final
(Harris v. State,
supra,
The aggravated assault that supported the felony murder convictions in both Dolensek and Oliver was the shooting of the victim that resulted in the death of the victim. See Dolensek, supra, fn. 1; Oliver, supra, fn. 1.
Proving venue is a simple exercise that generally requires the asking of one question. In light of the ease with which venue can be proved, it is difficult to understand why the appellate courts are repeatedly faced with this issue.
