Defendant Charles Flanagan was convicted of child molestation *599 following a jury trial at which he represented himself. Defendant had requested appointment of counsel, but he did not meet the county standards for indigency due to his gross monthly income of $1,169, and his request was denied. The trial court advised defendant to retain counsel and gave him time to do so. Defendant and his family contacted several attorneys and found they needed at least $5,000 for anyone to take the case. Although defendant was able to borrow some money from his employer and tried to borrow more from family members, he could not come up with this amount. He therefore appeared without counsel on the day of trial, and asked the court to consider appointing an attorney to represent him. The court denied this request, and defendant — who claims that he is almost illiterate — went to trial pro se.
In a motion for new trial, defendant (then represented by counsel) argued that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s request for appointed counsel and proceeding to trial without first ascertaining whether defendant had exercised reasonable diligence in attempting to retain counsel. The trial court took evidence on the reasonable diligence issue at a hearing on the motion for new trial. In its order, however, the court denied defendant’s motion without considering defendant’s diligence, holding that defendants like Flanagan who do not meet the indigency standard but nonetheless are unable to retain counsel have no recourse, regardless of how diligent they are: “Unfortunately, defendant falls into ‘that class of citizens which cannot reasonably hire counsel, as a practical matter, and is not entitled to appointed counsel, as a legal matter.’
Smith v. State,
We have repeatedly held that while the court must provide for representation of an indigent criminal defendant, see OCGA § 17-12-4, it is not obligated to appoint counsel for a defendant, such as Flanagan,
1
who is not indigent. See, e.g.,
Everman v. State,
203 Ga.
*600
App. 350 (1) (
The court’s duty to examine the defendant’s diligence is based on the right to counsel, which non-indigent as well as indigent defendants have, rather than the right to
appointed
counsel, which they do not. The State suggests Flanagan voluntarily chose to represent himself after being warned of the consequences of doing so, see
Kirkland v. State,
The Houston line of cases, holding that the court should determine whether the non-indigent defendant was reasonably diligent, all involved the issue of whether the court should have delayed the trial to allow the defendant to continue his attempts to retain counsel. This is different, of course, from the issue raised by this defendant — whether the trial court should have appointed counsel for him despite his non-indigent status. Nonetheless, the reasoning of these cases leads naturally to the question underlying Flanagan’s argument: If a court must grant a continuance to allow a reasonably diligent non-indigent defendant more time to retain an attorney, what must the court do if, even with the continuance, he still has not been able to obtain counsel?
The answer is found in Uniform Superior Court Rules 29.4 and 29.5. While the court does not have the
duty
to appoint counsel for defendants who do not meet the indigency standard, it does have the discretion to do so. See
Butler v. State,
In this case, the trial court’s order shows that the denial of defendant’s request for counsel was based solely on defendant’s failure to meet the indigency standard, without any consideration of his diligence or other special circumstances. Thus, we remand this case for a hearing to allow the trial court to exercise its discretion on whether the circumstances warranted appointment of counsel. Cf.
Hasty v. State,
Case remanded.
Notes
We recognize the possibility that a county’s indigency standard (and the statutory scheme which allows that standard to govern the determination of indigency) may at some point violate defendants’ constitutional rights by defining indigency too narrowly. Flanagan does not raise this issue, however. Instead, he accepts the court’s determination that he is non-indigent, and argues that he is nonetheless entitled to appointed counsel — or at least to *600 the trial court’s consideration of diligence before denying his request for appointed counsel.
