KNIGHTON v. THE STATE
S20A1195
310 Ga. 586
NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.
S20A1195. KNIGHTON v. THE STATE.
NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.
Aрpellant Quran Knighton was convicted of malice murder and possession of a knife during the commission of a felony in connection with the stabbing death of Markice Harris. Appellant contends that by twice interrupting his counsel’s closing argument to provide instructions to the jury, the trial court committed plain error and denied him his constitutional right to a fair trial, and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the interruptions and instructions. We affirm.1
Around 5:30 p.m., Harris sent Appellant a text saying that he was outside Appellant’s house and wanted to fight. Two hours later, Appellant responded that he had been asleep, and Harris sent a text saying that they could meet tomorrow. Harris then sent Appellant texts saying, “no funny sh**”; “leave that dam[n] pocket knife in the house”; “You try sum funny I’ll try sum funny”; and “I’m really [fixing to] just kill yo Sh** . . . better hop[e] I can control myself.” Appellant and Harris eventually agreed to meet later that night. Appellant then sent texts to a female username (which unbeknown to Appellant was actually used by Harris) saying that Harris was a
Briana Mosley, a 17- or 18-year-old relative who lived with Appellant, gave the following account in her trial testimony. Later that evening, she walked with Appellant to Harris’s gated subdivision, where they waited for Harris outside the gate. When Harris arrived, he walked toward Appellant and punched him. Appellant then took off his jacket and started fighting with Harris. They fell to the ground, where Harris began punching Appellant and banging his head against the ground. Mosley tried to intervene, and one of Harris’s neighbors who was driving out of the subdivision stopped his car and asked if Mosley needed help.2 Appellant and Harris stopped fighting, stood up, and began to walk away from each other, and the neighbor drove away.
Another family member called 911, and responding officers and medical personnel soon arrived at Appellant’s house. Appellant came out with his hands up, and Mosley led the responders to Harris, who had died from stab wounds. Officers searched the scene
A responding officer observed that Appellаnt had scrapes and bruises but no significant injuries. When the officer asked Appellant if he was injured, he replied only that he “had some bruises and scrapes.” Medical responders then checked him over and cleared him to be transported to the sheriff’s office. A few hours later, an investigator took photos of Appellant’s injuries, which included several scrapes and some bruises and swelling, but Appellant did not report any stab wounds and the investigator did not observe any stab wounds or any significant amount of blood on Appellant.
Investigators interviewed Mosley that night. She told them that she saw Harris with the knife first; thаt she did not know whether it belonged to Appellant or Harris; and that she said to Appellant after the stabbing, “I have to tell on you.” The next morning, Mosley met with two probation officers in connection with an unrelated case. She told the officers that after Harris repeatedly banged Appellant’s head on the ground during the fight, she and
The medical examiner who performed Harris’s autopsy testified that he had several incised (cutting) wounds: one on the back of his head thаt penetrated his skull; one on his back; two on the left side of his chest; and one on his finger, which the examiner characterized as a defensive wound. Harris also had four stab wounds: one on the right side of his face; one on his chest that perforated his heart; and two on the right side of his body, one of which punctured his right lung. In addition, he had abrasions on his hands, right shoulder, back, and knees. The medical examiner concluded that the blade of the knife used to stab Harris was at least five-and-a-half inches long.
Appellant testified, claiming that he stabbed Harris in self-defense. He gave the following account of the day of the incident. He agreed to meet Harris but did not believe that they were actually
Appellant claimed that on the day after he was arrested, he discovered that he had a stab wound on his side. He also claimed that he did not own a knife, and Mosley testified that she had never seen Appellant carrying a knife.
2. Shortly after beginning his closing argument, Appellant’s
This case, as I sort of mentioned in the beginning boils down to one thing: Dо you believe from the evidence that [Appellant] brought this knife to the fight and attacked Mr. Harris with it, or do you believe that Mr. Harris brought the knife and in the fight [Appellant] took it away from him? You might think that well, maybe he did, but maybe is not enough. The State has to prove, the State has to prove that [Appellant] brought the knife to the fight and it was his knife.
The trial court interjected, “Counsel, that’s simply not true,” and asked the lawyers to approach the bench. The bench conference was not transcribed. When it concluded, the court addressed the jury:
Let me say what I said to them up here. At the moment of the stabbing the issue is formed who did the stabbing; secondly, was [it] justified who did the stabbing under the laws of self defense. There will be other laws I give you about other things, so his statement that if you found that the victim brought the knife to the fight that ends your determination is what I was saying is not accurate. It’s at the time of the stabbing those two things I told you; is that clear to everybody? Okay. You may proceed.
Appellant’s counsel resumed his closing argument, clarifying that “[i]f you . . . find that [Appellant] had to take the knife away from him, Mr. Harris[,] to protect and save his life, you would have to acquit.” Counsel proceeded to argue that Mosley was credible and
They have got to show, they got to somehow show that my client, it wasn’t self defense, that he had a knife, you know, when I said a minute ago it turns on who brought the knife, well it turns on how, I will say it a little better, how [Appellant] got the knife. When the Government knows, the Government knows that this case, that that’s the most critical point in the whole case and that’s why they didn’t —
The court interrupted:
Counselor, I will again say, it doesn’t matter how he got the knife, it’s when the stabbing occurred, was the defendant justified in using self defense as the defense? You said it’s how he got the knife. It’s not how he got the knife; am I — is everybody clear on that? Okay. You can gо ahead.
Appellant’s counsel then continued his argument, primarily asserting that Appellant acted in self-defense because he reasonably believed that Harris was going to kill him.
In this Court, Appellant contends that the trial court’s two instructions to the jury amounted to plain error; that the court’s interrupting closing argument to provide those instructions denied him his constitutional right to a fair trial; and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the
(a) Appellant argues first that the trial court essentially instructed the jury to ignore evidence that Harris brought the knife to the fight and attacked Appellant with it. He asserts that the court’s first instruction told the jury to focus only on the moment of the stabbing and that the second instruction said that how Appellant got the knife was irrelevant. As Appellant acknowledges, his trial counsel did not object to the instructions, so we review this claim for plain error, meaning that we will reverse the trial court only if the alleged instructional error was not affirmatively waived; was clear and obvious, rather than subject to reasonable dispute; likely affected the outcome of the trial; and seriously аffected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings. See Stripling v. State, 304 Ga. 131, 135 (2018). See also
And although the trial court could have dealt with counsel’s misstatement in a number оf ways, the court was authorized to interrupt his closing argument to prevent his continuing to misstate the law and to correct any confusion that he may have caused the jury. See Davis v. State, 234 Ga. 730, 731 (1975) (“It has long been within the realm of a judge’s authority to correct misstatements made by counsel as to what the law is.”). See also Venturino v. State, 306 Ga. 391, 400 (2019) (explaining that “attorneys are not permitted to misstate the law to the jury”); Battle v. State, 305 Ga. 268, 275-276 (2019) (concluding that after defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s misstatements of the law during his closing argument, the trial court took “appropriate corrective action” by admonishing the prosecutor and instructing the jury on the points that had been misstated); Jones v. State, 110 Ga. 252, 252 (1899) (holding that when defense counsel asserted in argument that if the
The trial court then explained that the jury would have to make a determination of whether Appellant acted in self-defense “[a]t the moment of the stabbing,” and that a finding that Harris brought the knife to the fight would not end that determination. Those were accurate statements of the law. Even if the jury found
Thus, the trial court correctly instructed the jury to determine whether Appellant acted in self-defense at the time of the stabbing. And although Appellant argues otherwise, nothing in this
A closer question is presented by the trial court’s second instruction, which was given in response to defense counsel’s contentions that the State was required to show that Appellant “had a knife,” that the case “turn[ed] on” how Appellant got the knife, and that the State knew that how Appellant got the knife was “the most critical point in the whole case.” Although the latter two statements were not improper when considered in isolation, the first statement essentially repeated the argument that the court had already correctly deemed inappropriate. See Styles v. State, 309 Ga. 463, 470 (2020) (“A closing argument is to be judged in the context in which it is made.” (citation and punctuation omitted)). The court was therefore authorized (but, again, not required) to
Unlike the first instruction, which the trial court gave after time for reflection during a bench conference with counsel, this time the court immediately said, “[I]t doesn’t matter how [Appellant] got the knife, it’s when the stabbing occurred, was [he] justified in using self defense,” and “It’s not how he got the knife . . . is everybody clear on that?” The court’s statement about the knife not “matter[ing]” incorrectly suggested that all of the evidence about how Appellant got the knife was irrelevant, and the court’s asking if the jury was “clear on that” emphasized that point. Those parts of the instruction were inartful, but viewed in light of the instruction that preceded them and the jury instructions as a whole, we conclude that they did not rise to the level of obvious or harmful error. See Foster v. State, 306 Ga. 587, 590 (2019) (explaining that an allegedly erroneous jury instruction must be evaluated “in the context of the instructions as a whole”).
To begin, it appears that the court’s second instruction —
For the same reasons, Appellаnt has not shown that, but for the trial court’s isolated improper statement, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would have been more favorable to him. See, e.g., Jackson, 306 Ga. at 713 (holding under plain error review that because the charge as a whole would not have misled or confused the jury, the trial court’s one incorrect instruction was not harmful); Hood, 303 Ga. at 426 (holding that the appellant could not show that the trial court’s failure to provide additional jury instructions regarding his justification defense likely affected the outcome of his trial, because the instructions as a whole provided thе jury with sufficient direction to evaluate that defense).
Accordingly, Appellant has not met his high burden of establishing
(b) Appellant next contends that the trial court deprived him of a fair trial because the two interruptions and instructions prevented his counsel from making a full closing argument. We may assume without deciding that this claim is preserved for appellate review, because Appellant has not shown that his right to a fair trial was violated.
The trial court’s interruptions and instructions did not preclude Appellant’s counsel from robustly arguing that Harris brought the knife to the fight and used it to attack Appellant. Indeed, cоunsel focused his closing argument on the evidence that Harris brought the knife to the fight and attempted to discredit the evidence that Appellant went back to his house to get the knife. Counsel argued that Mosley, “the only eye witness,” told investigators and testified at trial that Harris “brought the knife to the fight and had the knife first,” which was a “huge problem” for the State’s case. Counsel also asserted that the prosecutor did not inform the jury that Mosley told the same story to investigators that
Appellant has not established that the trial court prevented his counsel from fully arguing his theory of self-defense. Thus, Appellant has not shown that the court violated his right to a fair trial. See, e.g., Terrell v. State, 271 Ga. 783, 786-787 (1999) (holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by preventing defense counsel from arguing “that the State had
(c) Finally, Appellant claims that his trial counsel provided
Appellant claims first that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to the interruptions and instructions on the ground that the trial court prevented him from making a full closing argument. Because we concluded in Division 2 (b) above that
Appellant argues next that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the trial court’s instructions on the ground that they told the jury to ignore evidence that Harris brought the knife to the fight. As discussed in Division 2 (a) above, the trial court initially interrupted counsel’s closing argument to correct his misstatement of the law and to provide an accurate instruction on the law of self-dеfense. An objection to that instruction would have been meritless, so trial counsel did not perform deficiently by deciding not to object. See id.
As we also discussed above, the trial court in its second instruction improperly said that it did not matter how Appellant got the knife, although we have already explained why that part of the instruction did not amount to an obvious or harmful error under
For these reasons, Appellant’s ineffective assistance claims lack merit.
Judgment affirmed. Melton, C. J., and Boggs, Peterson, Bethel, Ellington, and McMillian, JJ., concur. Warren, J., not participating.
DECIDED DECEMBER 21, 2020.
Murder. Newton Superior Court. Before Judge Ott.
Brian Steel, for appellant.
Layla H. Zon, District Attorney, Bailey R. Simkoff, Candice L. Branche, Assistant District Attorneys; Christopher M. Carr, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Matthew B. Crowder, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
