Cortez McClain, Walter Simon, and Anthony Gene Trim were tried by a Gwinnett County jury and convicted of several crimes in connection with an attempted robbery.
McClain, Simon, and Trim appealed, and each claimed that the evidence was legally insufficient to sustain his convictions. In addition, McClain alone asserted that the trial court erred when it excused the prospective juror for cause. Finding the evidence legally sufficient, the Court of Appeals affirmed Simon and Trim’s convictions. Simon v. State,
Simon and Trim then filed petitions for writs of habeas corpus, each asserting that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel on appeal because his lawyer failed to raise a claim of error about the prospective juror. A habeas court in Johnson County granted Simon’s petition, and it appears that no appeal was taken from that judgment. A habeas court in Richmond County, however, denied Trim’s petition, and Trim appealed.
To show that he is entitled to habeas relief for a denial of the effective assistance of counsel on appeal, Trim had to prove “that his appellate counsel was deficient in failing to raise an issue on appeal and that, if counsel had raised that issue, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the appeal would have been different.” Martin v. McLaughlin,
When the Court of Appeals considered that claim, its consideration began with a proper acknowledgment of the considerable discretion of a trial court to strike jurors for cause. See Simon,
There are, however, several reasons to doubt that Simon was decided correctly, and these reasons for doubt lead to the conclusion that the claim of error upon which the Court of Appeals reversed McClain’s convictions did not have clear and strong merit under the law. In the first place, the Court of Appeals hung its decision in Simon upon Kim and the failure of the trial court to conduct an adequate voir dire. The Court of Appeals failed to acknowledge, however, that we previously had clarified that Kim “should not be read as imposing upon a trial court the duty and responsibility to independently question a member of the venire when counsel for both parties do not wish to question the person further.” Poole v. State,
Moreover, the Court of Appeals in Simon relied principally upon cases in which it was claimed that a trial court erred by refusing to strike a prospective juror. We have said that “the trial judge is the only person in a courtroom whose primary concern, indeed primary duty, is to ensure the selection of a fair and impartial jury.” Kim,
Finally, the law was settled at the time of Simon that, even if a trial court abused its discretion in striking a prospective juror for cause, “the erroneous allowing of a challenge for cause [ordinarily] affords no ground of complaint if a competent and unbiased jury is finally selected.”
For all these reasons, the soundness of Simon is doubtful, and it certainly cannot be said that the claim of error upon which McClain prevailed in Simon was sufficiently clear and strong that any reasonably competent attorney would have raised it. We must conclude, therefore, that Trim has failed to show that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel on appeal, and the habeas court was right to deny his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm the judgment below.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
McClain, Simon, and Trim were convicted of attempted armed robbery, burglary, and false imprisonment, and Trim alone was convicted of aggravated assault.
In Simon, Judge Dillard concurred in judgment only and did not join the division of the opinion in which the Court of Appeals addressed the prospective juror.
Trim timely filed an application for a certificate of probable cause to appeal from the judgment of the habeas court, see OCGA § 9-14-52, and we granted that application.
This general rule would not apply, of course, if a juror were excused for constitutionally intolerable reasons (such as race or gender), but Trim makes no assertion in this case of a constitutionally intolerable basis for the trial court striking the juror in question. See Perry v. State,
