733 S.E.2d 730 | Ga. | 2012
John Dennis Woods appeals his convictions for malice murder, aggravated assault, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and concealing the death of another, all in connection with the death of Travis Sauls.
Construed to support the verdicts, the evidence showed that Sauls lived in the home of Gross, who is Woods’s first cousin; Woods lived in a nearby house. On September 28, 2009, Woods requested that Sauls come to his house to paint a storage container and wash Woods’s truck. The next day, Sauls was seen painting at Woods’s home. At approximately 11:00 a.m., a neighbor heard three or four gunshots come from the direction of Woods’s home, with a pause between the first and second shots. On September 30, 2009, Gross asked Woods if he had seen Sauls, and Woods responded that he had not but that Sauls was not welcome at his home anymore because he had done a poor job of washing his truck.
On October 2,2009, Woods’s brother went hunting on property in Florida belonging to their father, Roy Woods, and discovered suspicious burned items. The brother contacted a friend who was a law enforcement officer in Florida; together, they went to the hunting property and the brother’s friend notified local law enforcement
That same day, Roy Woods met with Woods, who told him that he had killed Sauls in self-defense and taken the body to Florida to dispose of it. At Woods’s home, investigators recovered partially burned clothing and a hidden pistol that proved to have fired the bullets that killed Sauls.
1. The evidence authorized the jury to find Woods guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which he was convicted. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
2. Woods met with investigating law enforcement officers on October 3, 2009, October 5, 2009, and October 7, 2009. At each meeting he was represented by counsel Tomlinson. Before trial, Woods, through new counsel, moved to suppress any evidence gained during those meetings, as well as all products of resulting searches, contending that Tomlinson was ineffective in failing to properly investigate Woods’s mental condition and in allowing Woods to make any statements to the investigators. The trial court found no ineffective assistance of counsel under the standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U. S. 668 (104 SC 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984). Under that test, in order to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Woods must show both that counsel’s performance was deficient, and that the deficient performance was-prejudicial to his defense.
On October 3, Woods, through Tomlinson, gave a general statement of the facts, including that he shot Sauls because he feared for his life; Woods answered limited questions and postponed any detailed questioning until October 5. On October 5, he told officers that: Sauls was at Woods’s home to do some painting and wash and wax Woods’s truck; Sauls told Woods that Sauls and Woods’s cousin Gross had a disagreement; Sauls was angry at Gross and said he would kill anyone who crossed him; Sauls began circling Woods, moving his hands, and looked “bug eyed”; Woods felt threatened; Woods went inside his home and retrieved a handgun; Woods returned with the pistol hidden in a potato chip bag; Sauls continued to walk around Woods, looking between Woods and the truck; Woods believed Sauls would kill him and take his valuables; Woods shot Sauls in the back; as he did so, Sauls continued to move his hands as if he was attempting to grasp Woods, still with a wild look in his eyes; Woods shot two or three times; Woods never saw a weapon on Sauls’s person; Woods covered Sauls’s body with a tarp, placed it in a child’s plastic pool, and shoveled bloodstained dirt into the pool; Woods placed the pool on a utility trailer, placed four tires over it, covered all of it with another tarp that he secured with bungee cords, and drove his truck and the trailer to his father’s hunting property in Florida, arriving about 1:00 p.m.; Woods arranged the pool, body, and tarps, with a tire over them; when it became dark that evening, Woods poured some gasoline on the pile, and lit it; when the tire had burned about halfway, Woods added a second tire, and then a third and fourth as each tire became partly consumed; Woods cleaned up at the cabin on the property, and returned to his residence in Georgia, where he showered and burned his clothes; he cried for “a couple of hours”; Woods returned to the hunting property and placed ashes from the fire in a bucket that he dumped into a ditch; he took a portion of Sauls’s torso that had not fully burned, loaded it on a wheeled dolly, took it to another portion of the property, and attempted to cover it with natural debris; Woods took unburned portions of tires and the pool to a nearby trash dump; Woods did not know Sauls to be violent or to own a handgun; and, Woods did not tell anyone about these events until October 2, 2009, when his father confronted him.
At the October 7 meeting, investigators asked for, and received, consent to search Woods’s truck, trailer, and residence.
The court found as fact that Woods initiated contact with law enforcement officers, intended to turn himself in prior to contacting Tomlinson, and, through another, instructed Tomlinson to meet him at the office of the sheriff. Woods contends this was not so, citing the testimony of Roy Woods to the effect that, on October 3, 2009, Tomlinson directed that Woods go to the sheriff’s office and meet him there, and that when the men arrived at the sheriff’s office, Roy Woods met Tomlinson outside, told him of Woods’s medical history and that Woods had a brain abnormality, learning and developmental disabilities, needed medication, and would not be able to “get this.” However, this testimony compared with Tomlinson’s presented a conflict in the evidence, resolution of which is for the trial court, and the court’s findings are supported by evidence and not clearly erroneous. See Suggs v. State, 272 Ga. 85, 88 (4) (526 SE2d 347) (2000).
Tomlinson was faced with a client who had decided to turn himself in and had already revealed to a law enforcement officer that he had killed Sauls, claiming self-defense, and that he had attempted to conceal the body. Viewing Tomlinson’s conduct in the context of his perspective at the time of the interrogations, we cannot conclude that he rendered ineffective assistance in permitting Woods to cooperate in the interrogations and searches. See Bowley v. State, 261 Ga. 278, 281 (4) (404 SE2d 97) (1991). The fact that present counsel might have pursued a different strategic course does not render Tomlinson’s strategy unreasonable. Freeman v. State, 284 Ga. 830, 835 (4) (672 SE2d 644) (2009).
Nor has ineffective assistance of counsel been shown in counsel’s failure to investigate further Woods’s mental state before proceeding with the interrogations. Assuming that the facts known to Tomlinson gave a basis for doing so and that his performance was deficient, “it is not enough to show merely that counsel unreasonably failed to inquire into [Woods’s] mental state — he must show a (reasonable probability) that such an evaluation would have affected the outcome at trial.” Devega v. State, 286 Ga. 448, 450 (4) (a) (689 SE2d 293) (2010) (Citations and punctuation omitted.) No evidence was presented that Woods was incapable of freely and voluntarily deciding to cooperate with law enforcement officers and waiving his right to remain silent, and there is no showing that further investigation on Tomlinson’s part would have resulted in a different decision as to whether to cooperate with the investigation.
The State contends that Woods’s failure to submit a written request for the instruction precludes him from asserting error on the failure to give the instruction.
[A] criminal defendant is ordinarily required to present writtenrequests for any desired jury instructions. OCGA § 5-5-24*810 (b). He is relieved of this duty only “where the omission is clearly harmful and erroneous as a matter of law in that it fails to provide the jury with the proper guidelines for determining guilt or innocence. [Cit.]” Camphor v. State, 272 Ga. 408, 414 (6) (b) (529 SE2d 121) (2000).
Shepherd v. State, 280 Ga. 245, 252 (4) (626 SE2d 96) (2006). See also Hayes v. State, 279 Ga. 642, 646 (4) (619 SE2d 628) (2005) (“[T]he trial court is not required to charge without written request as to any collateral matter. [Cit.]”) (Punctuation omitted; emphasis supplied.)
The court instructed the jury:
In order for a mental delusion or delusional compulsion to constitute a defense, it must appear not only that the accused was actually laboring under a delusion at the time of the commission of the alleged criminal act, but the alleged criminal act itself was connected with the particular delusion under which the accused was then laboring, and that the delusion was as to a fact that if true would have justified the alleged act by the accused. This is a question of fact to be determined by you.
This instruction, as far as it goes, is correct. But the legal concept of justification is a necessary component of the delusional compulsion defense.
In Georgia, a person is not legally insane simply because [he] suffers from schizophrenia or a psychosis. [Cit.] Rather, a defendant is not guilty by reason of insanity if, at the time of the criminal act, the defendant did not “have the mental capacity to distinguish between right and wrong in relation to such act” or a mental disease caused “a delusional compulsion that overmastered his will to resist committing the crime.” OCGA §§ 16-3-2, 16-3-3. . . . When a delusional compulsion is the basis of an insanity defense, the delusion must be one that, if it had been true, would have justified the defendant’s actions. [Cit.]
Alvelo v. State, 290 Ga. 609, 612 (3) (724 SE2d 377) (2012) (Emphasis supplied.)
It is only in those instances where an individual, who is able to distinguish right from wrong, commits a criminal act while suffering under a delusional compulsion which leads*811 him to believe his action is right, i.e., “justified,” that Georgia law accepts insanity as a defense. Hence, “if the delusion is as to a fact which would not excuse the act with which the prisoner is charged, the delusion does not authorize an acquittal of the defendant.” [Cit.]
Lawrence v. State, 265 Ga. 310, 313 (2) (454 SE2d 446) (1995) (Emphasis in original). The delusional compulsion defense is available only when the defendant is “suffering under delusions of an absurd and unfounded nature [and] was compelled by that delusion to act in a manner that would have been lawful and right if the facts had been as the defendant imagined them to be.” Id. (Emphasis supplied; footnote omitted.)
Accordingly, the jury could not determine whether Woods was suffering from a delusion that satisfied the legal definition without an understanding of what constituted an act that would have been justified, if the circumstances were as Woods contended he believed them to be, without being instructed as to what conduct would constitute justification. Absent such an instruction, the jury was not provided “with the proper guidelines for determining guilt or innocence.” Shepherd, supra. (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Accordingly, Woods must be afforded a new trial.
Judgments reversed.
The crimes occurred on September 29, 2009. On May 17, 2010, a Berrien County grand jury indicted Woods for malice murder, felony murder while in the commission of aggravated assault, aggravated assault, possession of a firearm during the commission of the felony of aggravated assault, and concealing the death of another. Woods was tried before a jury September 14-16,2011, and found guilty on all charges. On October 12,2011, by order nunc pro tunc September Í6, 2011, Woods was sentenced to a term of life in prison for malice murder, a concurrent term of 20 years in prison for aggravated assault, and terms of five years in prison for possession of a firearm during the commission of the felony of aggravated assault and concealing the death of another, to be served consecutively with the life term and with each other; the felony murder count was vacated by operation of law. See Malcolm v. State, 263 Ga. 369, 371-372 (4) (434 SE2d 479) (1993). Woods filed a notice of appeal on October 13, 2011. His appeal was docketed in this Court for the April 2012 term, and orally argued on June 5, 2012.
Strickland, recognized the right to the effective representation of counsel under the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. We assume, without deciding, that the trial court was correct in concluding that the right to the effective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment had arisen as to the representation at issue. See Rackoff v. State, 281 Ga. 306, 308-309 (1) (637 SE2d 706) (2006); O’Kelley v. State, 278 Ga. 564, 565-568 (2) (604 SE2d 509) (2004) (disapproved on other grounds, Stinski v. State, 286 Ga. 839,856 (61), n. 5 (691 SE2d 854) (2010)). We note that it does not appear that the United States Supreme Court has recognized a right to the effective assistance of counsel under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. See Sweeney v. Carter, 361 F3d 327, 333 (IV) (7th Cir. 2004). We also assume, without deciding, that it was appropriate for Woods to raise this ineffective assistance claim in a pre-trial motion, before there was an outcome of the trial against which to assess any prejudice. But see Sosniak v. State, 287 Ga. 279, 287 (1) (B), n. 3 (695 SE2d 604) (2010).
The investigator testified that Tomlinson told him that a crime had been committed, and “something” about what Tomlinson had been told by Roy Woods.
At trial, Roy Woods testified that after Woods told him that he had killed Sauls, Roy' Woods said “there’s only one thing you can do here, and you’ve got to tell the truth.”
OCGA § 16-3-3 reads:
A person shall not be found guilty of a crime when, at the time of the act, omission, or negligence constituting the crime, the person, because of mental disease, injury, or congenital deficiency, acted as he did because of a delusional compulsion as to such act which overmastered his will to resist committing the crime.
OCGA § 17-8-58 reads:
(a) Any party who objects to any portion of the charge to the jury or the failure to charge the jury shall inform the court of the specific objection and the grounds for such objection before the jury retires to deliberate. Such objections shall be done outside of the jury’s hearing and presence.
(b) Failure to object in accordance with subsection (a) of this Code section shall preclude appellate review of such portion of the jury charge, unless such portion of the jury charge constitutes plain error which affects substantial rights of the parties. Such plain error maybe considered on appeal even if it was not brought to the court’s attention as provided in subsection (a) of this Code section.
This disposition makes it unnecessary to treat Woods’s remaining enumeration of error as it addresses a situation unlikely to recur on retrial.