Case Information
*1 SECOND DIVISION
ANDREWS, P. J.,
MCFADDEN аnd RAY, JJ. NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/
October 29, 2014 In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A14A1395. HONESTER v. THE STATE.
M C F ADDEN , Judge.
After a jury trial, Wayne Honester was convicted of obstruction of a law enforcement officer. Honester appeals, asserting that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to file a plea in bar of former jeopardy after a prior jury trial on the same charge ended in a mistrial over Honester’s objection. Because counsel’s performance was deficient in failing to file a plea in bar and there is reasonable probability that, but for such deficiency, the outcome below would have been different, we reverse.
Honester was indicted оn a single charge of felony obstruction of a law enforcement officer by fighting with the officer during a lawful arrest. The facts underlying the indictment were that police officers, who had responded to a report of gunshots, were speaking with Honester and others in the area. After one of the *2 officers had asked Honester three times to remоve his hands from his pockets, Honester complied and put a plastic bag in his mouth. The officer grabbed Honester’s neck to try to get him to spit out the bag, but Honester pulled away as the officer tried to hold on to his arm and neck. The other officer tried to assist and they fell to the ground. Using a baton to threaten Honester, the officers subdued and handcuffed him.
Honester was tried before a jury on March 11, 2011. After deliberating for
about three hours, the jury sent a note to the judge, stating, “We cannot agree on the
verdi[c]t. What are your instructions?” Both the state and the defense requested that
the trial court give the jury an charge for further deliberations. See
Allen v.
United States
,
Upon learning of the nature and numerical breakdown of the jury vote, the state withdrew its request for an Allen charge. Honester renewed his request for the charge and also suggested that the jurors be asked if anyone was refusing to deliberate. The сourt stated that it would ask that question before deciding whether to give an Allen charge. The court submitted the question to the jury, and the jury responded that no one was refusing to deliberate. Honester again requested that the court give the Allen charge.
The trial judge, however, expressed concern that such a charge would place “undue pressure on a juror.” After further argument from the defense, the trial judge observed that the case “has had a lot of difficult evidence.” The judge then refused to give an charge and, over the express objection of the defense, sua sponte declared a mistrial. The court reasoned: “I don’t think it appropriate to give the Allen charge and then put the jury back into a posture of further deliberations and pressuring when it’s clear from two of the communications that they cannot reach a verdict so I’ll declare a mistrial in the case.”
Five days later, Honester was tried again before a different jury which returned a guilty verdict. But upon being polled in open court, one of the jurors indicated that the verdict had nоt been freely and voluntarily made by him. The judge then *4 instructed the jury to return to the jury room and continue deliberating. A short time later, the jury returned with another guilty verdict. Before imposing sentence, the trial court asked Honester if he wanted to say anything on his own behalf. Honester responded, “Your Honor, . . . I don’t see how one week it’s eleven my way and then next weеk all twelve say I’m guilty. I don’t understand that Your Honor . . . I feel I would have been entitled to a fair trial last week. You would have did the same thing you did today send them right back in the room.” Thereafter, the trial court imposed the maximum sentence of five years.
Trial counsel did not move for a new trial, but filed a direct appeal. After new appellate cоunsel was appointed and raised a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel, this court remanded the case to the trial court to give appellate counsel the opportunity to pursue the ineffectiveness claim. On remand, an evidentiary hearing was held on Honester’s claim that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to file a plea in bar following the court’s sua sponte declaration of a mistrial over objection of the defense. At the hearing, trial counsel testified that he had not considered filing a plea in bar after the first trial. When asked why he did not consider it, he admitted: “I really don’t have any reason. It’s just not something that crossed my mind, to be *5 honest.” Severаl weeks after the hearing, the trial court summarily denied the motion for a new trial. This appeal followed.
1. Ineffective assistance of counsel.
Honester contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a new trial based on his assertion that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to file a plea in bar after the first trial ended in a mistrial over the objection of the defense. We аgree.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under the standard
set forth in
Strickland v. Washington
,
Here, Honester has met his burden of showing that trial counsel’s failure to file
a plea in bar was not the result of reasonable professional judgment. As counsel’s
uncontradicted testimony at the ineffective аssistance hearing established, he
exercised no professional judgment at all with regard to filing a plea in bar. Rather,
as he admitted, he had no reason for such an omission and failed to file a plea in bar
simply because it never “crossed [his] mind.” Because counsel’s failure to file a plea
in bar was the result of oversight and not the result of sоme trial tactic or reasonable
professional judgment, such failure constitutes deficient performance. See
Henderson
v. Hames
,
Honester must also show that counsel’s deficient performance рrejudiced his defense. Mattox , supra. As no plea in bar was filed, the merits of such a plea are not directly before us. Rather we must decide whether Honester has shown that there is a reasonable probability that the outcome below would have been different if counsel had filed a plea in bar.
In that light we examine the propriety of the trial court’s sua sponte declaration of a mistrial, over Honester’s objection, in the first trial. Once jeopardy has attached, a mistrial may be declared over the defendant’s objection only in cases of manifest necessity.
Once a defendant’s jury is impaneled and sworn, jeopardy attaches, and he is entitled to be acquitted or cоnvicted by that jury. If a mistrial is declared without a defendant’s consent or over his objection, the defendant may be retried only if there was a manifest necessity for the mistrial. A manifest necessity to declare a mistrial may exist under urgent circumstances, such as where an impartial verdict cannot be reached. Because of the severe consequences of ordering a mistrial without the accused’s consent, a trial court should give careful, deliberate, and studious consideration to whether the circumstances demand a mistrial, with a keen eye toward other, less drastic, alternatives. The state bears the heavy burden of showing such manifest necessity where, as here, a mistrial is granted ovеr the defendant’s objection. It is also within the trial court’s discretion to determine whether a jury is hopelessly deadlocked, thus necessitating a mistrial. The decisive factor is not the length of the deliberation, but the inability of the jury to agree on a verdict.
Johnson v. State
,
A trial court’s judgment about whether there was manifest necessity to grant a mistrial is entitled to great deference. A trial judge has acted within his sound discretion in rejecting possible alternatives and in granting a mistrial, if reasonable judges could differ about the proper disposition, even though in a strict, literal sense, the mistrial is not necessary. This great deference means that the availability of another *8 alternative does not without more render a mistrial order an abuse of sound discretion.
Ogletree v. State , 300 Ga. App. 365, 366 (685 SE2d 351) (2009) (citation and punctuation omitted, emphаsis supplied).
In the instant case, while the trial judge’s decision to grant a mistrial is entitled
to great deference, there existed not only less drastic alternatives, but other factors
which arguably rendered the grant of a mistrial an abuse of discretion. The first of
those other factors was the trial court’s error in asking the jury the precise nature of
its vote as tо guilt and innocence. “The law is clear in this state that a trial court may,
after the jury has had a case under consideration and indicates that it is unable to
agree on a verdict, inquire how the jury stands numerically.”
Gibson v. State
, 272 Ga.
801, 802 (2) (
The trial court also compounded its error by failing to follow “the better
practice [of] consider[ing] carefully the factors listed in
Thornton v. State
, 145 Ga.
App. 793, 795 (
[w]hen the trial court is informed of a deadlock, the following are among the steps to be taken in deciding whether to order a mistrial or to require the jury to deliberate further: (1) polling the jurors or questioning them as a group to detеrmine whether additional time would be helpful; (2) considering whether the jury is so exhausted that the free will of the minority might be overcome; (3) considering the length of the trial and the complexity of the case; and (4) considering the length of time the jury has deliberated.
Albert v. State
,
In doing so, the trial court correctly noted that the jury had indicated that it
could not agree on a verdict. However, “the trial court was not bound by those
pronouncements. [Cit.] On the contrary, the trial court, in the exercise of a sound
discretion, was required to make its own determination as to whether further
deliberations were in order. [Cit.]”
Sears
, supra at 838 (1) (jury twice stated that it
was at an eleven to one “deadlock,” but trial court was not bound by those
statements). See also
Todd v. State
,
The trial judge offered no explanation as to why a proper
Allen
charge would
result in such undue pressure, and thus his reasoning appears to be premised on the
false presumption that he could have only given an improperly coercive instruction.
Indeed, based on the trial court’s unexplained reasoning, a valid charge or other
instruction to continue deliberations could never be given once a jury has claimed to
be at an impasse. This, of course, is not the law in Georgia, which has approved the
*11
use of non-coercive
Allen
charges by trial judges confronted with a deadlocked jury.
McMillan v. State
,
Under the circumstances of this case, there is no reason why the trial court
could not have simply given the pattern jury instructions for a hung jury or an
otherwise appropriately non-coercivе charge. For instance, in the similar case
of
Gamble v. State
,
Moreover, the record reveals circumstances that are typically cited as factors
that support instructing a dеadlocked jury to continue its deliberations, rather than
immediately granting a mistrial. The jury had deliberated for the relatively short time
of three hours, the jury indicated that no one was refusing to deliberate, and the jurors
were only a single vote from unanimity. Under these circumstances, further
deliberations certainly would have been appropriate. Seе
Sanders v. State
, 290 Ga.
445, 449-450 (6) (
The power of a trial judge to interrupt proceedings on his own by declaring a
mistrial is subject to stringent limitations.
State v. Johnson
,
We therefore reverse. On remand the trial court should grant the motion for new trial thereby allowing Honester an opportunity to file a plea in bar.
2. Remaining arguments.
Because of our holding above in Division 1, we need not reach Honester’s remaining arguments.
Judgment reversed. Andrews, P. J., concurs; Ray, J., concurs in the judgment only.
