JACKSON v. THE STATE; MCGINTY v. THE STATE
A01A2509, A01A2524
Court of Appeals of Georgia
March 28, 2002
254 Ga. App. 562 | 562 S.E.2d 847
MILLER, Judge.
Judgment affirmed. Pope, P. J., and Mikell, J., concur.
DECIDED MARCH 28, 2002.
Savage, Turner, Pinson & Karsman, Brent J. Savage, C. Dorian Britt, for appellants.
Holland & Knight, Elizabeth C. Helm, Thomas B. Branch III, Sara L. Doyle, Brennan & Wasden, Wiley A. Wasden III, James V. Painter, for appellee.
A01A2509. JACKSON v. THE STATE.
A01A2524. MCGINTY v. THE STATE.
(562 SE2d 847)
MILLER, Judge.
Kahbarious Jackson was convicted of various offenses arising out of his participation in a group sexual assault of a woman. Beyond the issues he waived below, he argues on appeal that he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to request lesser included offense charges and that the court unduly restricted his presentation of evidence concerning the victim‘s sexual history with Jackson. Since the decision as to which jury charges to request is tactical, and since the court allowed Jackson to prеsent the testimony he proffered at the in-camera hearing, we discern no error and affirm his convictions. We also affirm the sodomy conviction of Der-
Construed in favor of the verdict, the evidence shows that Jackson and a co-hort, Larry Brown, confronted a woman on the street who they believed had failed to pay for cocaine received from Jackson. Despite her protests, Jackson grabbed her arm and forced her down some steps into an isolated area. When the woman denied receiving the cocaine and denied having money to pay, Brown threatened to kill her and Jackson pointed a knife at her within a foot of her face. While Jackson emptied her purse, Brown removed her clothes and fondled her breasts, vagina, and anus to search for the cocaine.
Finding no cocaine and no money, Jackson demanded oral sex from the woman, who vigorously protested. Holding the knife, Jackson forced her into an outdoor bricked area of the local community center and with the assistance of Brown forced her mouth onto Jackson‘s penis. Over the next two hours, thе protesting woman was subjected to a series of brutal and often simultaneous sexual assaults, ranging from anal and vaginal intercourse to fellatio to belt-whippings on her buttocks and fire near her vagina, and involving Jackson, Brown, McGinty, and other men. A crowd including children gathered to watch the assaults, which eventually ended when the battеred woman fainted and a neighbor came to her rescue.
Jackson, Brown, McGinty, and others were charged with rape and aggravated oral sodomy. Jackson and Brown were also charged with aggravated assault (brandishing the knife), kidnapping, false imprisonment, and possession of a knife during the commission of a felony. Brown was individuаlly charged with aggravated sexual battery, sexual battery, aggravated anal sodomy, and aggravated assault (with a cigarette lighter and belt). At the joint trial, Jackson‘s counsel argued that the sex was all consensual as payment for cocaine. McGinty‘s attorney, admitting that McGinty received oral sex, also claimed it was cоnsensual. The jury found Jackson guilty on all counts but acquitted McGinty on the rape and aggravated oral sodomy counts and found him guilty only of a lesser included charge of sodomy. Both moved for a new trial, which was denied. Jackson appeals in Case No. A01A2509, and McGinty appeals in Case No. A01A2524.
Case No. A01A2509
1. Jackson first argues that he received inеffective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to request jury charges on assault and battery (as a lesser included offense of rape) and terroristic
Although Jackson‘s trial counsel testified at the motion for new trial hearing, Jackson‘s appellate counsel did not ask him about his reasoning for not requesting the specified lesser charges. The testimony revealed that trial counsel carefully reviewed and adopted the charges proposed by co-defendant‘s counsel. Thus, we follow the legal doсtrine that “[d]ecisions as to which charges will be requested and when they will be requested fall within the realm of trial tactics and strategy. They provide no grounds for reversal unless such tactical decisions are so patently unreasonable that no competent attorney would have chosen them.”3 Not only has Jackson failed to show that his trial counsel‘s decision not to request such charges was patently unreasonable, but such charges would have been inconsistent with Jackson‘s defense theory that the actions were all consensual.4 The trial court did not clearly err in finding that Jackson failed to demonstrate that his trial counsel‘s performance was deficient.5
2. Jackson argues that the trial court erred in granting the State‘s motion in limine based on the Rape Shield Statute6 and in limiting the evidence he could present showing that he and the victim had a prior relationship in which they exchanged sex for drugs. Specifically, he claims that the court “prohibited appellant Jackson frоm offering any evidence other than his own testimony of the prior relationship between appellant and the prosecutrix.”
The record, however, reflects otherwise. The court did not prohibit Jackson from offering other evidence of his relationship with the victim; rather, Jackson‘s own actions limited his presentation. The court simply followed the procedure set forth in
Here Jackson proffered only his testimony at the in-camera hearing. Not only did he not proffer testimony from others, but when the State observed that Jackson had no independent witnesses to the sexual relationship, Jackson agreed, testifying that no one else knew about his sexual relationship with the victim. Based on Jackson‘s proffer, the court ruled his testimony was admissible. The court expressly left open the door to allow any party during the trial to request another in-camera hearing to elicit additional testimony if that party wanted to have anyone else testify to prior sexual conduct of the victim. During the trial, the court twice more reminded the parties of this opportunity. Although Jackson stated during trial that he had other witnesses to testify that the victim gave sex for drugs, Jackson never requested another in-camera hearing nor proffered the testimony of these witnesses, and he never showed that these witnesses could testify about his personal sexual relationship with the victim.9
We review the trial court‘s exclusion of evidence under the Rape Shield Statute for abuse of discretion.10 Since only Jackson testified at the in-camera hearing, the court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that only Jackson‘s testimony was admissible.
3. Jackson contends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on both oral and anal aggravated sodomy, even though Jackson was charged only with oral aggravated sodomy. Evidence showed that Jackson forced the victim to engage in both forms of sodomy with him. Where the indictment charges that the defendant committed the offense by one mеthod while the court instructs the jury that the offense could be committed by either of the statutory methods
Nevertheless, Jackson induced and then waived this error. Jackson adopted the jury charges proposed by his co-defendants, which included a charge defining the offense of sodomy as either anal or oral. The court gave the instruction as requested. “A defendant cannot complain of a verdict which was brought about by a charge which he had requested.”12
During deliberations, the court twice more instructed the jury, at the jury‘s request, on the same requested charge. Regarding the first reinstruction, Jackson agreed that the jury should be so charged again and raised no objection when the court asked for any exceptions to the recharge. Following the second reinstruction, Jackson‘s counsel expressly stated that he had no exceptions. Any error was waived.13
4. Citing
We note that a decision of this Court held otherwise. Citing Williams v. State,17 Cannon v. State18 concluded that the defendant preserved his merger issue “by raising it in his amended motion for new trial.” Of course, as set forth above, Williams, quoting from Alonso v. State,19 held to the contrary, stating that issues raised “for the first time in a motion for new trial . . . present nothing for review.”20
The dissent‘s position that the merger question is nonwaivable is based on the premise that Jackson‘s sentence was void. However, as explained in Noble v. State,22 cited by the dissent, void sentences refer to those imposing punishment that the law does not allow. That is not the case here. Indeed, Noble specifically cites the circumstance here — “imposition of consecutive sentences for two crimes when one was allegedly a lesser included offense of the other” — as a waivable objection.23
Case No. A01A2524
5. In his appeal, McGinty first contends that the court erred in failing to grant him a directed verdict of acquittal on the rape and aggravated sodomy charges brought against him. The acquittal of McGinty on these offenses renders moot any complaint about the failure to direct a verdict on them.24
6. McGinty next complains that the court erred in not instructing the jury on public indecency as a lesser included charge of rape and aggravated sodomy. Once again, McGinty‘s acquittal on the greater charges renders his complaint moot. Indeed, McGinty was convicted only of sodomy, an offense to which he freely admitted. Even if we were to construe McGinty‘s argument as suggesting public indecency was a lesser included charge of sodomy, and even if we were to accept this premise, “the uncontradicted evidence showed completion of the greater offense; therefore, charges on the lesser offense[] are not required.”25
Judgments affirmed. Blackburn, C. J., Pope, P. J., Andrews, P. J., Johnson, P. J., Smith, P. J., Ruffin, Barnes, Ellington and Mikell, JJ., concur. Eldridge and Phipps, JJ., concur in Divisions 1, 2 and 3 and
ELDRIDGE, Judge, dissenting.
Because a merger issue under
As held in Kinney v. State, 234 Ga. App. 5, 7 (2) (505 SE2d 553) (1998), one crime is included in another as a matter of fact if it is established by proof of the same or less than all of the facts used to prove the other.
Accordingly, a trial court is without subject matter jurisdiction to sentence on an offense that has merged into another offense as a matter of law and/or fact. Such a sentence would be a mere nullity because the conviction on a merged offense is against the law. An appeal may be taken from such a void sentence, even if no objection was made in the court below, because “a void sentence is one which imposes punishment the law does not allow. [Cits.]”28 “A judgment which is void for any cause is a mere nullity and it may be so held in any court where it becomes material to the interest of the parties to consider it.”29
Accordingly, I cannоt agree that Jackson, by failure to object at the time of sentencing, waived consideration of his claim that the aggravated assault count merged into either the rape or kidnapping counts pursuant to
I am authorized to state that Judge Phipps joins in this dissent.
DECIDED MARCH 28, 2002
David D. Bishop, for appellant (case no. A01A2509).
Dell Jackson, for appellant (case no. A01A2524).
Paul L. Howard, Jr., District Attorney, Alvera A. Wheeler, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
