Rico D. Petty petitioned for habeas corpus contending, inter alia, that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in that his decision to plead guilty to felony murder and aggravated assault was based on counsel’s misunderstanding of the law of merger. The habeas corpus court denied Petty’s petition and we granted him a certificate of probable cause to appeal that ruling. For the following reasons, we reverse.
The record reveals that Petty was charged in a three-count indictment. Count 1 alleged Petty committed malice murder “by shooting [the victim] with a shotgun.” As to Count 2, felony murder, the indictment alleged that Petty “while in the commission of the offense of Aggravated Assault, did cause the death of [the victim] by *274 shooting him.” The language of the indictment for Count 3, aggravated assault, averred that Petty “did make an assault upon the person of [the victim] with a shotgun, a deadly weapon.” The evidence of these crimes, as set forth by the prosecutor at the plea hearing, showed that Petty, co-defendant Thurman and another man picked up the victim as part of a drug deal and took the victim to an isolated area in DeKalb County. After Thurman, Petty and the victim exited the car, Thurman beat the victim so severely it left him struggling on the ground. Petty then walked up with a 12-gauge shotgun and shot the victim in the chest, causing him to bleed to death.
Based on his trial counsel’s advice, Petty agreed to plead guilty to both the felony murder charge and the aggravated assault charge. Counsel’s advice was based on her assessment that Petty would get a more favorable sentence by pleading guilty, in that if Petty went to trial, he faced a possible life sentence (if convicted of either malice or felony murder) with a consecutive 20-year sentence if convicted on the aggravated assault charge, whereas by accepting the State’s plea offer and pleading guilty, Petty would get a life sentence with a concurrent 20-year sentence for the aggravated assault. In rendering this advice, Petty showed through the guilty plea transcript and testimony given at the habeas corpus hearing that trial counsel was operating under the belief that Petty could be convicted of aggravated assault based upon the beating of the victim by co-defendant Thurman.
We agree with Petty that trial counsel’s advice was based upon an incorrect understanding of the law. The language in the indictment charging Petty with aggravated assault specified that the assault was made “with a shotgun, a deadly weapon.” While Petty could have been indicted for aggravated assault based on the beating, see
Hewitt v. State,
The fact that Petty could not have been
convicted
of aggravated assault by beating does not automatically mean that Petty’s guilty plea was invalid. While an accused may be able to show a due process violation where a guilty plea was made to an offense not described in the indictment,
Breland v. Smith,
The habeas corpus court’s reasons for upholding the guilty plea do not withstand scrutiny. Although the habeas court reasoned that the crimes as pled in Count 2 (felony murder) and Count 3 (aggravated assault) “facially allege distinct offenses” because “shooting” the victim while in the commission of an aggravated assault differs from assaulting the victim “with a shotgun,” there exists no valid basis under the facts in this case for making that distinction. The evidence of the crimes did not show that Petty assaulted the victim with the shotgun but then shot him to death using a different weapon or that Petty used the shotgun to assault the victim in any manner other than by shooting him. Thus, merger of the aggravated assault
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count into the murder count was required by the language of the indictment and the evidence adduced. See
Malcolm v. State,
To prevail on his ineffectiveness claim, Petty was required to show both that counsel’s performance was deficient and also that but for counsel’s deficiency there is a reasonable probability he would have proceeded to trial rather than enter into the guilty plea. See
Smith v. Williams,
Petty established the prejudice prong by showing that because of counsel’s deficient advice, Petty entered into a plea that not only failed to benefit him, it affirmatively penalized him, in that he received a harsher sentence than the one that could have been legally imposed had he proceeded to trial and been convicted on all counts.
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Under these circumstances, “it is clear... that but for counsel’s error, it is reasonably probable [Petty] would not have pled guilty to the charge of aggravated [assault], [Cit.]”
Gerisch,
supra,
Accordingly, we conclude that the habeas corpus court erred when it determined that Petty failed to show attorney error and prejudice under Strickland v. Washington, supra.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
According to the prosecutor, after Thurman “beat the tar out of” the victim, “[a]t that time [Petty] comes along with the 12-gauge shotgun. And after the victim is down on the ground, completely beaten by [Thurman], takes the 12-gauge shotgun . . . and shoots directly in his chest.”
