Lead Opinion
Appellant Larry Shane Turner was tried on an indictment charging him with the malice murder, felony murder (with aggravated assault being the underlying felony), and aggravated assault of Shawn Moss Kelley.
Appellant testified he fired the fatal shot in self-defense because the victim had earlier threatened to kill him and he believed the victim was reaching for a gun with which to shoot him. The police discovered the victim’s body with his hands in his front pants pockets, and no firearm was on or near the victim’s body. However, a solid metal cylinder was in a front pants pocket and a padlock was on the
1. Appellant maintains the trial court gave an improper sequential charge to the jury. A sequential charge is improper when it eliminates the jury’s full consideration of voluntary manslaughter and its concomitant mitigating factor of provoked passion prior to the jury’s consideration of felony murder. See McNeal v. State,
2. Appellant maintains the trial court erroneously accepted mutually exclusive verdicts • — • the determination he was not guilty of malice murder because his action was justified, and the determination he was guilty of felony murder because his action was not justified. However,
*20 “[v]erdicts are mutually exclusive ‘where a guilty verdict on one count logically excludes a finding of guilt on the other.’ ” [Cits.] Thus, the rule against mutually exclusive verdicts applies to multiple guilty verdicts which cannot be logically reconciled; the rule is not implicated where, as here, verdicts of guilty and not guilty are returned. [Cit.]
Shepherd v. State,
While appellant’s assertion of error speaks in terms of mutually exclusive verdicts, the basis of his argument is that the verdicts are inconsistent. In Milam v. State,
imprudent and unworkable . . . [to] 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. Such an individualized assessment of the reason for the inconsistency would be based either on pure speculation, or would require inquiries into the jury’s deliberations that the courts generally will not undertake.
United States v. Powell, supra,
We have, however, recognized an exception to the abolition of the inconsistent verdict rule: when instead of being left to speculate
The jury was instructed that “[t]he fact that a person’s conduct is justified is a defense to prosecution for any crime based on that conduct.” OCGA § 16-3-20. The trial court twice instructed the jury it was to consider first whether or not the defendant’s conduct in shooting the victim was justified and, if the jury determined the conduct was justified, the jury should acquit the defendant as to each count. All the crimes for which appellant was tried were based on his conduct of shooting the victim and the jury found that conduct to have been justified. As both OCGA § 16-3-20 and the trial court’s repeated instruction to the jury make clear, the jury’s finding of justification as to the malice murder count applies to the felony murder and aggravated assault charges based on the same conduct. In light of the jury’s express finding of justification, it was error for the trial court to enter judgment on the jury verdicts finding appellant guilty of felony murder and aggravated assault.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The fatal shooting took place on December 23,2004. Appellant was arrested the same day and was charged in a true bill of indictment filed on July 19,2005. The trial commenced on May 8, 2006, and concluded on May 12 with the jury’s return of its verdicts and the imposition of a sentence of life imprisonment on the felony murder conviction and a concurrent 20-year term of years for the aggravated assault conviction. Appellant’s motion for new trial was filed June 9,2006, and was denied January 3,2007. Anotice of appeal was filed January 31,2007, and the appeal was docketed in this Court on July 31, 2007. It has been submitted for decision on the briefs.
The verdict form gave the jury the following options: “Count 1 - MURDER ‘We, the jury, find that the defendant’s conduct was justified and find the Defendant NOT GUILTY of MURDER with Malice Aforethought.’ ” This statement was followed by the signature of the jury foreman. The verdict form continued: “Count 2 - FELONY MURDER We, the jury, find
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I agree with the majority that the verdicts in this case are not mutually exclusive, since the jury acquitted Appellant of malice murder and found instead that he was guilty of felony murder during the commission of aggravated assault. See Shepherd v. State,
Abolition of the inconsistent verdicts rule rests on “the principle that it is not generally within the trial court’s power to make inquiries into the jury’s deliberations, or to speculate about the reasons for any inconsistency between guilty and not guilty verdicts. [Cit.]” Dumas v. State, supra. “The reason could be an error by the jury in its consideration or it could be mistake, compromise, or lenity, but as a matter of prudence, the conviction . . . should be upheld so long as the evidence will support it. [Cit.]” King v. Waters,
we need not speculate whether the jury verdict is the product of lenity or of legal error. The jury verdict form makes it clear the jury determined [A]ppellant was not guilty of malice murder because the jury found his action in shooting the victim to have been justified. . . . [T]he jury’s finding of justification as to the malice murder count applies to the felony murder and aggravated assault charges based on the same conduct.
Majority opinion, p. 21. What the majority fails to acknowledge expressly, however, is that, with regard to the malice murder count, the verdict form only provided the jurors with the opportunity to return a not guilty verdict based upon the defense of justification. As footnote 2 of the majority opinion indicates and as a review of the attached copy of the verdict form clearly shows, the jury was not given the option of finding that Appellant was not guilty of malice murder because he did not act with malice aforethought or for any reason other than justification. Thus, it is obvious from a consideration of the totality of the verdict form, rather than its isolated elements, that the two verdicts were not the product of the jurors’ own inconsistent determination that his act of shooting the victim was and was not justified. Instead, it is unquestionably the result of the verdict form which erroneously limited their determination of whether Appellant
Thus, I agree that there is no need to speculate why the jury returned the inconsistent verdicts in this case. However, contrary to the majority’s analysis, the inconsistency is without doubt the result of the “legal error” exemplified by the incomplete and confusing verdict form itself. As the majority concedes, Milam’s prohibition against reliance on the inconsistent verdicts rule extends to a case, such as this, in which the verdict which the defendant challenges on appeal may be the product of error or mistake. Compare King v. Waters, supra at 122 (inconsistency not based on mistake or error, but on “an appellate or a habeas corpus court’s ruling”). Here, the error or mistake in the verdict form was waived by Appellant when he did not object and acquiesced in its submission to the jury. See Jones v. State,
A “defendant is entitled to the benefit of the doubt in the construction of an ambiguous verdict ([cit.])____” Lindsey v. State,
[W]here truly inconsistent verdicts have been reached, “(t)he most that can be said... is ... that either in the acquittal or the conviction the jury did not speak their real conclusions, but that does not show that they were not convinced of the defendant’s guilt.” [Cit.]
United States v. Powell,
The evidence is sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant was guilty of felony murder during the commission of an unjustified aggravated assault. Thus, the trial court did not err in entering the judgment of conviction and life sentence on the verdict of guilt as to that offense. The trial court did, however, err in entering a judgment of conviction and concurrent 20-year sentence on the verdict of guilt on the separate count of aggravated assault. Bolston v. State,
I am authorized to state that Justice Thompson joins in this dissent.
