S19A0866. HILLS v. THE STATE.
Supreme Court of Georgia
September 23, 2019
306 Ga. 800
BOGGS, Justice.
FINAL COPY
Roman Eugene Hills was convicted of malice murder in connection with the 2014 strangulation, beating, and stabbing death of his live-in girlfriend, Beverly Jones. He appeals, asserting error in the trial court‘s exclusion of a defense witness’ testimony and two instances of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.1
1. Construed in the light most favorable to the jury‘s verdicts,
Police officers arrived and on entering the bedroom saw “blood everywhere,” but noticed no blood on the stairs or on the floors downstairs.3 Hills was “ranting” at the officers, and as they tried to
Forensic investigators processed the scene, photographing the outside of the house and then going from room to room inside the house photographing the windows and doors to document “whether they were locked or open” and whether “the windows were accessible
At trial, the medical examiner testified that the cause of the victim‘s death was strangulation, with beating and stabbing as significant contributing conditions. The victim had 122 external injuries and 23 internal injuries caused by strangulation, blunt force trauma, and sharp instruments. According to the medical examiner, the injuries were inconsistent with a fall down the stairs. DNA analysis showed the victim‘s blood on the blade of one pair of scissors, both the victim‘s and Hills’ blood on the blade of a second
Hills testified at trial that he woke from a deep sleep and found the victim lying next to him covered in blood and cold, and that he attempted to wake her and perform CPR before calling for help. He said that he found items of jewelry and the victim‘s cell phone missing. He also said that on the night before, which was Halloween, he and the victim drank a bottle of wine and then went to a local club for several hours where they danced until the victim said she was ready to go home and told him, “I think one of these hoes put something in your drink. Let‘s go.” They walked home from the club, a mile to a mile-and-a-half.
Hills testified that he believed that “somebody really did put something in my drink,” because he felt tired, sweated profusely, and slept very heavily. But he reluctantly acknowledged on cross-examination that he did not tell the police about the missing items
Though Hills has not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to support his malice murder conviction, as is this Court‘s practice in murder cases, we have reviewed the record to determine the legal sufficiency of the evidence. We conclude that the evidence summarized above was more than sufficient to enable a rational trier of fact to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Hills was guilty of the crime for which he was convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307, 319 (III) (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
2. In his first enumeration of error, Hills asserts that the trial court erred by barring testimony from a neighbor that the victim‘s older son had gained entry into the house on other occasions, which he claims would have impeached through contradiction the police officers’ testimony that the house was secure. See
(a) A few days before trial, the State filed a “Motion in Limine Regarding ‘Some Other Dude Did It’ Defense.”5 The motion sought to prevent Hills from introducing evidence to suggest that the victim‘s older son may have murdered her. After jury selection, the trial court heard argument on the State‘s motion and concluded that evidence that the victim‘s son entered the house with a key or through a window on a date other than that of the murder did
The court provisionally granted the State‘s motion pending the presentation of evidence and forbade Hills from mentioning such a theory in his opening statement.
At trial, outside the presence of the jury, Hills called Carolyn Walker, a neighbor of the victim, to testify. Walker was sworn and said that the victim‘s son went to the victim‘s house “the next day right after [the victim] died . . . getting [bicycles] and whatever else that he wanted out [of] the house“; that Walker was “pretty sure he had a key“; and that at some unspecified date “[b]efore any of this happened,” Walker had seen him enter the house through a second-story window that could be reached from the porch roof. The trial court excluded the proffered testimony, concluding that the evidence did not connect the son with the corpus delicti, did not clearly point
Hills then argued, as an alternative ground for admission, that the proffered testimony would impeach the testimony of police officers that the house was secure when they responded to the scene. The State replied that the proffered testimony could not impeach the officers’ testimony that the windows were not accessible on the day of the crime; that the proffered testimony was unclear, because Walker first said she thought the victim‘s son came in through the window on the day after the murder but then stated that she believed he had a key; and that in any event the proffered testimony was cumulative of Hills’ testimony at trial that one window had a faulty lock, that another window did not lock, and that he had
(b) Hills relies upon
3. Hills alleges two instances of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. To prevail on his Sixth Amendment claim of ineffective assistance, Hills must prove both that the performance of his lawyer was professionally deficient and that he was prejudiced by this deficient performance. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U. S. 668, 687 (III) (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984); Terry v. State, 284 Ga. 119, 120 (2) (663 SE2d 704) (2008). To prove deficient performance, Hills must show that his attorney “performed at trial in an objectively unreasonable way considering all the circumstances and in the light
(a) Hills first alleges that his trial counsel was professionally deficient in failing to request a jury instruction on involuntary intoxication. A defense of involuntary intoxication, however, requires that a defendant be so impaired as to “not have sufficient mental capacity to distinguish between right and wrong in relation to such act.”
Hills points to his trial testimony that the victim told him that she wanted to leave because she thought someone at the club had put “something” in his drink, and that he believed that to be the case because he felt tired, sweated profusely, and slept heavily. But he did not report the victim‘s alleged statement or his alleged fatigue or profuse sweating to police when he spoke to them at the crime scene or when they interviewed him after his arrest, even though the police asked him why he left the club. Moreover, his older sister testified that Hills had been a heavy sleeper his entire life, which Hills confirmed on cross-examination. And no persuasive evidence was presented at trial, whether through toxicology reports, medical testimony, or the testimony of patrons of the club or the neighbor to whom Hills spoke when he and the victim arrived home, of Hills’
Hills’ trial counsel testified at the hearing on the motion for new trial that he concluded a charge on involuntary intoxication was inappropriate for several reasons: “[W]e didn‘t have anything . . . in terms of chemical analysis or anything along those lines . . . . And the defense was that he didn‘t do it, not that he did it and it was due to involuntary intoxication.” Hills asked his trial counsel if he reconsidered that position after the State produced a jailhouse recording of Hills telling a relative, “I know what I did, and I didn‘t do it consciously because I did it while I was asleep,” or after Hills testified that the victim told him that she thought that someone put “something” in his drink. Trial counsel responded, “No. We had set it up one way, and I certainly wouldn‘t want to abandon the defense halfway through for something that really wasn‘t – there wasn‘t any evidence other than his own testimony.” On cross-examination, the State asked trial counsel, “What would your opinion as trial counsel be of having [an] I-didn‘t-do-this defense, as well as but if I did, then
[A]n attorney‘s decision about which defense to present is a question of trial strategy. Unless the choice of strategy is objectively unreasonable, such that no competent trial counsel would have pursued such a course, we will not second-guess counsel‘s decisions in this regard.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Hendrix v. State, 298 Ga. 60, 62 (2) (a) (779 SE2d 322) (2015). And “hindsight has no place in an assessment of the performance of trial counsel.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Hampton v. State, 295 Ga. 665, 670 (2) (763 SE2d 467) (2014). Taken out of context, trial counsel‘s statement that “[y]ou have to do one or the other” could be construed to mean that he erroneously thought that it was not legally permissible to request a jury instruction on inconsistent theories of defense. See Shah v. State, 300 Ga. 14, 22 (2) (793 SE2d 81) (2016) (“If the evidence supports alternative theories, neither the State nor the trial court is authorized to preclude the jury from considering
(b) Hills also asserts that his trial counsel was professionally deficient with respect to the examination of Kris Rice, the Director of the Coastal Children‘s Advocacy Center, who interviewed three of the victim‘s children, aged six years and younger, less than two weeks after the victim was killed. Rice testified that all three of the children said that Hills had hit the victim in the past. On cross-examination, Rice acknowledged that none of the children were
Hills contends that his trial counsel was professionally
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED SEPTEMBER 23, 2019.
Murder. Chatham Superior Court. Before Judge Freesemann.
Robert L. Persse, for appellant.
