We granted Spencer Shorter’s petition for probable cause to appeal in this habeas corpus proceeding in order to address whether under the facts in this case the habeas court applied the correct standard when it determined that the appellate strategy utilized by Shorter’s counsel was not “so unreasonable” under
Battles v. Chap
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man,
Shorter was the driver of a Cadillac containing three other men who became involved in a police chase through east Atlanta and onto 1-20. Shots were fired at the pursuing officers and evidence indicated that Melvin Shaw, a passenger in Shorter’s car, was the shooter. Shorter and Shaw were indicted, inter alia, on charges of aggravated assault on a police officer. They were tried together and both were convicted; Shorter’s conviction was based on the fact that his conduct aided and abetted Shaw, who actually committed the aggravated assaults. See
Shorter v. State,
Shorter’s co-defendant Shaw appealed his conviction to the Court of Appeals. That court reversed Shaw’s conviction, finding that the trial court erred when it refused to give defense counsel’s requested jury instruction on reckless conduct as the lesser included offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon based on OCGA § 16-5-20 (a) (1). See
Shaw v. State,
Shorter chose after his conviction to file a motion for new trial and appellate counsel, Victor Cuvo, was appointed to represent him. It is uncontroverted that Shorter’s trial counsel neither requested a reckless conduct charge nor joined in Shaw’s objections regarding the charge, although the error in failing to give a reckless conduct charge was equally applicable to Shorter. Cuvo, however, did not raise any claim in the motion regarding the ineffectiveness of trial counsel. After the trial court denied the motion, Shorter was appointed new appellate counsel, Gerard Kleinrock. The record reflects that Kleinrock sought a remand of the case from the Court of Appeals to the trial court for a hearing on whether Shorter’s first appellate counsel, Cuvo, was ineffective for failing to argue in the motion for new trial that Shorter’s trial counsel was ineffective. The Court of Appeals addressed this remand request in its opinion,
Shorter,
supra,
Shorter filed a petition for habeas corpus, contending that Kleinrock’s performance was deficient because he did not raise trial counsel’s failure to request or join in Shaw’s request for the reckless conduct charge when asserting trial counsel’s ineffectiveness before the Court of Appeals. Shorter contends that this deficiency prejudiced his case and that but for this deficient performance, there is a reasonable probability the Court of Appeals would have reversed his conviction for the very same reason it reversed co-defendant Shaw’s conviction. See
Sloan v. Sanders,
The habeas court, in considering Shorter’s contention that Kleinrock’s performance was deficient, looked to Battles v. Chapman, supra, for guidance. In Battles this Court held that
when appellate counsel’s performance is claimed to be deficient because of a failure to assert an error on appeal, the reviewing court should resolve whether the decision was a reasonable tactical move which any competent attorney in the same situation would have made, by comparing the strength of the errors raised against the significance and obviousness of the alleged error passed over. The presumption of effective assistance of counsel can be overcome only when the ignored issue was so clearly stronger than the errors presented that the tactical decision must be deemed an unreasonable one which only an incompetent attorney would have adopted.
(Emphasis supplied; footnoted omitted.) Id.,
Weighing the relative strengths and weaknesses of errors enumerated on appeal against those not enumerated is an appropriate and efficient method of assessing the effectiveness of appellate counsel in many, if not most, cases asserting that counsel’s performance was deficient for failing to raise a nonfrivolous trial error. Accord
Smith v. Robbins,
We now recognize that the general weighing rule we adopted in
Battles
does not effectively operate in all cases in which appellate counsel’s performance is claimed to be deficient because of a failure to assert an error on appeal. Situations may arise when every error enumerated by appellate counsel on appeal presented a strong, non-frivolous issue but counsel’s performance was nonetheless deficient because counsel’s tactical decision not to enumerate one rejected error “was an unreasonable one which only an incompetent attorney would adopt.” Id. at 705 (1) (a). Accord
United States v. Cook,
Hence, we modify our language in
Battles
to the extent it indicates that the “only” way the presumption of effective assistance of appellate counsel can be overcome in cases alleging deficient performance in the selection of appellate issues is for the habeas petitioner
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to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that an ignored issue outweighed the enumerated errors. Id. at 705. We reiterate that the controlling principle is “whether [appellate counsel’s] decision was a reasonable tactical move which any competent attorney in the same situation would have made.”
Battles,
supra,
In the instant case, the habeas court addressed Kleinrock’s decision not to include in his arguments before the Court of Appeals the issue of trial counsel’s ineffectiveness regarding the reckless conduct charge. The habeas court found that counsel’s decision was not “so” unreasonable as to support a finding of deficient performance because of the strength of the appellate issue Kleinrock did raise. The habeas court’s application of the weighing test in Battles may have misdirected the court’s focus away from the pertinent analysis the facts of this particular case warranted, namely, whether a competent attorney in the same situation as Kleinrock would also have failed to raise the reckless conduct charge argument. There has been no determination whether, standing on its own, Kleinrock’s decision was one only an incompetent attorney would have adopted. Id. at 705 (1) (a). It is for this reason that we vacate the habeas court’s judgment and remand this case with direction that the habeas court review Shorter’s petition for writ of habeas corpus under the appropriate analysis as set forth in this opinion.
Judgment vacated and remanded.
Notes
The habeas court found significant Kleinrock’s testimony that he would have raised the reckless conduct charge issue in the Court of Appeals had trial counsel requested the instruction. This testimony clearly reflects that Kleinrock recognized that the reckless conduct charge argument had merit. Kleinrock’s explanation for why he did not raise it, namely, that the issue would have to pass through a Sixth Amendment claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, ignores the fact that Kleinrock could have argued trial counsel’s lapse in not requesting a reckless conduct charge at the same time he sought remand in the Court of Appeals asserting trial counsel’s other lapse, i.e., the failure to file a motion to suppress.
The argument drew strong parallels between
Vansant v. State,
