Ronnie Deyton Mooneyham was convicted of the murder of Douglas McArthur Archer. Mooneyham’s co-defendant, Harold Rogers, with whom he was jointly tried, was found guilty of the voluntary manslaughter of Archer. The evidence at trial showed that Archer was killed by a single bullet, but was in conflict as to whether Mooneyham or Rogers fired the fatal shot. On direct appeal this court found the evidence supporting each verdict sufficient to meet the standard of
Jackson v. Virginia,
Mooneyham subsequently filed a petition for habeas corpus in Bibb Superior Court contesting, inter alia, 1 the ineffectiveness of his trial counsel for failing to object to the alleged inconsistency of the verdicts. The habeas court found that the verdicts were inconsistent, and agreed with Mooneyham that his trial counsel had been ineffective in failing to object to them. The habeas court granted Mooney-ham’s petition for habeas corpus and ordered the trial court to resentence Mooneyham for the crime of voluntary manslaughter. The State appeals.
Without deciding whether the habeas court correctly concluded that the verdicts in this case are inconsistent, we note that in
Milam v. State,
Powell,
supra, and
Dunn v. United States,
Where inconsistent verdicts are returned, it is clear that either the jury has erroneously failed to follow the instructions of the trial court, or that the jury has exercised leniency in favor of the defendant. But as noted in Powell, in this circumstance it is not clear who profits or loses. The State may not appeal a verdict of acquittal. Likewise, it would be “unworkable [to adopt] a rule that would allow criminal defendants to challenge inconsistent verdicts on the ground that in their case the verdict was not the product of lenity, but of some error that worked against them.” Powell, 105 SC at 478. The defendant will be protected by the appellate court’s review of the evidence supporting his conviction, independent of the jury’s determination that there was insufficient evidence to support another count under the indictment. Id.
We hold that these principles are equally applicable to a situation where the jury returns inconsistent verdicts against co-defendants. Therefore, Mooneyham may not challenge the verdicts below on the ground that the jury, whether through error or lenity, chose to convict his co-defendant of a lesser offense. The verdict as to Rogers, whether or not correct under the evidence presented at trial, in no way demonstrates that the jury was not convinced of Mooneyham’s guilt of the offense of murder. On direct appeal this court found the evidence sufficient to support Mooneyham’s conviction of murder independent of Rogers’s conviction of voluntary manslaughter.
Mooneyham v. State,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The habeas court denied relief as to every other ground raised by Mooneyham. This court denied Mooneyham’s application to appeal: See Mooneyham, v. Parker, #3693, decided September 19, 1986.
The determinative factor in judging, under the former rule, whether verdicts were inconsistent was whether “ ‘the acquittal of one charge necessarily include[d] a finding against a fact that [was] essential to conviction for the other charge.’ ”
Hines v. State,
