Stewart v. State ( 2021 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: May 17, 2021
    S21A0074. STEWART v. THE STATE.
    ELLINGTON, Justice.
    A jury found James Stewart guilty of felony murder and
    aggravated assault in the shooting death of his girlfriend, Wendy
    Johnson. Stewart contends that the trial court committed plain
    error in giving an improper sequential verdict form to the jury and
    that his counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the verdict
    form. In addition, Stewart contends that his sentence for aggravated
    assault (life without parole) was illegal. 1 For the reasons explained
    1 The shooting occurred on July 24, 2017. A Haralson County grand jury
    returned an indictment on August 29, 2017, charging Stewart with malice
    murder (Count 1), felony murder predicated on aggravated assault (Count 2),
    aggravated assault (Count 3), and discharging a firearm under the influence
    of alcohol or drugs (Count 4). At the beginning of Stewart’s trial on December
    3, 2018, the State requested that the trial court enter an order of nolle prosequi
    on the firearms charge (Count 4). The jury found Stewart not guilty on Count
    1 and guilty on Counts 2 and 3. By judgment entered on January 9, 2019, the
    trial court sentenced Stewart to life in prison without parole for felony murder
    below, we vacate the sentence for aggravated assault and otherwise
    affirm Stewart’s convictions. 2
    Johnson was killed by a bullet that entered her right shoulder
    and tore through vital organs in her chest. Stewart was the sole
    witness to the shooting. At trial, Stewart testified as follows. Just
    before the shooting, he went outside to help Johnson retrieve some
    things from her car. He set his gun, which he almost always kept
    within arm’s reach, on the top of the car and then leaned in the open
    door to kiss and hug Johnson, who was seated in the front passenger
    seat. Then, Stewart buckled the seatbelt around Johnson and closed
    the door, intending to go around and get into the driver’s seat. He
    grabbed the gun, which was still sitting on the roof of the car, and it
    went off. Stewart insisted that he fired the gun accidentally, but he
    (Count 2) and life in prison without parole for aggravated assault (Count 3).
    Stewart filed a timely motion for a new trial, which he amended on October 16
    and November 18, 2019. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion for
    a new trial on February 7, 2020. Stewart filed a timely notice of appeal, and
    his appeal was docketed in this Court to the term beginning in December 2020
    and submitted for decision on the briefs.
    2 Stewart does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, so we do not
    consider it, as this Court no longer reviews as a matter of course sufficiency of
    the evidence in the absence of an enumerated error in non-death penalty cases.
    See Davenport v. State, 
    309 Ga. 385
    , 399 (4) (b) (846 SE2d 83) (2020).
    2
    admitted his “negligence to gun safety” in handling a loaded firearm
    near Johnson after he had been drinking heavily and smoking
    marijuana.
    Stewart       requested   a    jury   instruction    on   involuntary
    manslaughter predicated on two misdemeanors: reckless conduct
    and discharging a firearm while under the influence of alcohol or
    drugs. The trial court determined that the requested instruction was
    warranted by the evidence, which included Stewart’s testimony that
    he was negligent in handling a firearm when he was intoxicated.3
    After       general    instructions,    including    those    regarding      the
    presumption of innocence, the reasonable doubt standard, and the
    3See OCGA §§ 16-5-3 (a) (“A person commits the offense of involuntary
    manslaughter in the commission of an unlawful act when he causes the death
    of another human being without any intention to do so by the commission of
    an unlawful act other than a felony.”); 16-5-60 (b) (“A person who causes bodily
    harm to or endangers the bodily safety of another person by consciously
    disregarding a substantial and unjustifiable risk that his act or omission will
    cause harm or endanger the safety of the other person and the disregard
    constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable
    person would exercise in the situation is guilty of a misdemeanor.”); 16-11-134
    (a) (1) (“It shall be unlawful for any person to discharge a firearm while . . .
    [u]nder the influence of alcohol or any drug or any combination of alcohol and
    any drug to the extent that it is unsafe for the person to discharge such firearm
    except in the defense of life, health, and property[,]” which conduct shall
    constitute “a misdemeanor of a high and aggravated nature.”).
    3
    credibility of witnesses, and after instructions defining the charged
    offenses of malice murder, felony murder, and aggravated assault,
    the trial court explained the verdict form, including the provision for
    the lesser offense of involuntary manslaughter. The court instructed
    the jury:
    If you do not believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant is guilty of malice murder and/or felony murder
    but do believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant is guilty of involuntary manslaughter, then you
    would be authorized to find him guilty of involuntary
    manslaughter. And in that event the form of your verdict
    would be – and we specified it for you with the bold
    wording for you to find accordingly.
    The court instructed the jury, as Stewart requested, that a person
    commits involuntary manslaughter by causing the death of another
    person without any intention to do so by the commission of the
    offense of reckless conduct or by the commission of the offense of
    discharging a firearm while under the offense of alcohol or drugs,
    and then gave the statutory definitions of those predicate offenses.
    At the conclusion of the charge, the court gave the pattern jury
    instruction regarding the jury’s verdict: “Whatever your verdict is,
    4
    it must be unanimous; that is, it must be agreed to by all.” 4 This was
    the only reference to unanimity in the charge recited to the jury.
    The preprinted verdict form read as follows:
    VERDICT
    We, the jury, find by unanimous verdict:
    As to Count 1: Malice Murder:
    ______Not Guilty OR ______Guilty
    As to Count 2: Felony Murder:
    ______Not Guilty OR ______Guilty
    IF YOUR VERDICT AS TO COUNT 1 AND 2 FOR
    MALICE MURDER AND FELONY MURDER IS NOT
    GUILTY, THEN PROCEED TO RENDER VERDICT
    AS TO THE LESSER INCLUDED OFFENSE OF
    INVOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER BELOW. IF
    YOUR VERDICT AS TO COUNT 1 OR COUNT 2 FOR
    MALICE MURDER OR FELONY MURDER IS
    GUILTY THEN SKIP TO COUNT 3.
    Lesser included offense of Involuntary Manslaughter:
    ______Not Guilty OR ______Guilty
    As to Count 3: Aggravated Assault:
    ______Not Guilty OR ______Guilty
    Stewart did not object to the jury instructions or to the verdict
    form. At the end of the jury’s deliberations, the foreperson checked
    “not guilty” for malice murder and “guilty” for felony murder and
    aggravated assault on the verdict form. The foreperson made no
    4  See Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases, §
    1.70.40 (4th ed., 2007).
    5
    mark on the line on the verdict form for involuntary manslaughter.
    1. Stewart argues that the verdict form that the trial court
    provided to the jury constituted an improper sequential jury
    instruction, because the form mandated that the jury reach a
    unanimous verdict of not guilty on both malice murder and felony
    murder before considering a verdict on the lesser offense of
    involuntary manslaughter. Stewart contends that the trial court
    committed plain error by providing the form to the jury. For the
    reasons that follow, we discern no plain error.
    (a) This Court has held that, when the evidence presented in a
    criminal trial warrants a jury instruction on a lesser-included
    offense, the trial court errs if it instructs the jury that it may
    consider the lesser offense only if it first unanimously finds the
    defendant not guilty of the indicted greater offense. See Camphor v.
    State, 
    272 Ga. 408
    , 414 (6) (d) (529 SE2d 121) (2000).5 An instruction
    5 See also Arrington v. Collins, 
    290 Ga. 603
    , 608 (3) (724 SE2d 372) (2012)
    (explaining that, under Cantrell v. State, 
    266 Ga. 700
    , 703 (469 SE2d 660)
    (1996), “where a jury deliberates a greater offense as well as a lesser included
    offense, unanimity among the jurors is not required as to the greater offense
    before the jury can vote on the lesser included offense; what is required is that
    6
    that tells the jury that it should consider possible verdicts in a
    particular sequence is not an improper sequential jury instruction
    as long as the instruction does not insist on unanimity as to a not-
    guilty verdict on the greater offense before consideration of the
    lesser offense. See Morris v. State, 
    303 Ga. 192
    , 198 (V) (A) (811
    SE2d 321) (2018) 6; Armstrong v. State, 
    277 Ga. 122
    , 122 (2) (587
    SE2d 5) (2003); Camphor, 
    272 Ga. at 414
     (6) (d); Suits v. State, 
    270 Ga. 362
    , 366 (6) (507 SE2d 751) (1998). See also Jackson v. State,
    the jury return a unanimous verdict as to the whole”); Cantrell, 
    266 Ga. at
    702-
    703 (adopting the reasoning from other jurisdictions that requiring a jury to
    convict or acquit on the greater offense before considering the lesser offense
    gives the prosecution an unfair advantage, because jurors who favor the lesser
    offense, unless they can dissuade those favoring the greater, may very well
    choose to vote for conviction of the greater offense rather than to hold out until
    a mistrial is declared and the defendant is left without a conviction on any
    charge); Kunselman v. State, 
    232 Ga. App. 323
    , 324-325 (1) (501 SE2d 834)
    (1990) (relying on Cantrell and identifying reversible error where the trial
    court charged the jury, with respect to one count of the indictment, “if you find
    the defendant not guilty” of that offense, “you would then and only then be
    authorized to consider the lesser included offense” on that count).
    6 We note that Morris concerned voluntary manslaughter as a lesser
    offense of malice murder and felony murder predicated on aggravated assault
    and discussed a sequential jury instruction that we rejected in Edge v. State,
    
    261 Ga. 865
    , 867 (2) (414 SE2d 463) (1992). See Morris, 303 Ga. at 197 (V) (a).
    The issues of evidence of provocation and passion that are unique to voluntary
    manslaughter as a lesser offense are not raised in this case. See Suits v. State,
    
    270 Ga. 362
    , 366 (6) (507 SE2d 751) (1998); McNeal v. State, 
    263 Ga. 397
    , 398
    (2) (435 SE2d 47) (1993). Our reliance on Morris in this case is therefore limited
    to its analysis of the law applicable to lesser offenses generally.
    7
    
    267 Ga. 130
    , 133 (12) (475 SE2d 637) (1996) (“We know of no
    authority which requires that charges on a lesser included offense
    . . . precede the charge on the greater offense.”). We have approved
    the pattern jury instruction on lesser included offenses and deemed
    it preferable in general to alternative instructions. See Camphor,
    
    272 Ga. at 414
     (6) (d). That pattern instruction provides (with blanks
    to fill in the pertinent lesser offense):
    If you do not believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant is guilty of (indicted crime), but do believe
    beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of
    __________, then you would be authorized to find the
    defendant guilty of __________, and the form of your
    verdict in that event would be, “We, the jury, find the
    defendant guilty of __________.”
    Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases, §
    1.60.11 (4th ed., 2007).
    The jury instructions at issue in this case, in particular the
    verdict form, deviated from the pattern instruction. See Rowland v.
    State, 
    306 Ga. 59
    , 68 (6) (829 SE2d 81) (2019) (“A preprinted verdict
    form is treated as part of the jury instructions which are read and
    considered    as   a   whole   in   determining   whether   there   is
    8
    [instructional] error.” (citations and punctuation omitted)). Through
    the form, the trial court instructed the jury of only one circumstance
    when it could “render verdict” as to the lesser offense of involuntary
    manslaughter: if it first reached a “verdict,” which the recited
    instructions and the verdict form specified must be “unanimous,” of
    “not guilty” as to Count 1 and Count 2 for malice murder and felony
    murder. Compared to other cases in which we have held that jury
    instructions were not improperly sequential – because, although the
    instructions in those cases deviated from the pattern instruction on
    lesser offenses, they did not compel the jury to reach a unanimous
    verdict of not guilty on the greater offense before it could consider
    the lesser offense – the language of the verdict form in this case is
    more limiting of the jury’s consideration of the lesser offense.7 We
    7See, e.g., Morris, 303 Ga. at 198 (V) (A) (upholding instruction that “you
    are not required to reach unanimous agreement on a greater offense before
    considering lesser included offenses[;] [y]ou must, however, consider the
    greater offense before considering any lesser included offenses”); Camphor, 
    272 Ga. at 414
     (6) (d) (upholding instruction that “should you find the defendant
    not guilty of the crime of burglary, you would be authorized to consider under
    the evidence whether or not he did, at said time and place, commit the lesser
    offense of criminal trespass”); Jones v. State, 
    263 Ga. 835
    , 839 (5) (439 SE2d
    645) (1994) (upholding instruction, after instructions setting forth the
    9
    reiterate that trial courts that elect to dictate the sequence in which
    a jury is to consider (deliberate about) possible verdicts must avoid
    any instruction, including on a verdict form, that directs the jury to
    consider the lesser offense only if it first unanimously finds the
    defendant not guilty of (reaches a verdict of not guilty on) the
    indicted greater offense.
    (b) Given Stewart’s failure to object to the jury instructions,
    including the verdict form, however, we do not address this claim of
    error in terms of ordinary appellate review. See Russell v. State, 
    309 Ga. 772
    , 782 (3) (a) (848 SE2d 404) (2020). We must instead resolve
    the issue by examining whether Stewart has cleared the much
    higher bar of showing plain error.
    To show plain error, the appellant must demonstrate that
    the instructional error was not affirmatively waived, was
    obvious beyond reasonable dispute, likely affected the
    outcome of the proceedings, and seriously affected the
    fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings. Satisfying all four prongs of this standard is
    elements of felony murder, that “in your consideration of the indictment, that
    is, the charge of felony murder, you may also consider the lesser included
    offense of involuntary manslaughter in the commission of an unlawful act”).
    10
    difficult, as it should be.
    Clarke v. State, 
    308 Ga. 630
    , 637 (5) (842 SE2d 863) (2020) (citations
    and punctuation omitted). See also State v. Herrera-Bustamante,
    
    304 Ga. 259
    , 264 (2) (b) (818 SE2d 552) (2018) (The appellate court
    need not analyze the other elements of the plain-error test when the
    appellant fails to establish any one of them.). An instructional error
    is obvious beyond reasonable dispute when the error is “plain under
    controlling precedent or in view of the unequivocally clear words of
    a statute or rule.” Cheddersingh v. State, 
    290 Ga. 680
    , 685 (2) n.5
    (724 SE2d 366) (2012) (citations and emphasis omitted). See also
    Hill v. State, 
    310 Ga. 180
    , 194 (12) (a) (850 SE2d 110) (2020) (“An
    error cannot be plain where there is no controlling authority on
    point.”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    The verdict form at issue here is not erroneous in view of the
    unequivocally clear words of a statute or court rule. And Stewart
    cites only one appellate case that actually reversed a conviction
    based on an improper sequential jury instruction: Kunselman v.
    State, 
    232 Ga. App. 323
    , 324-325 (1) (501 SE2d 834) (1990). The
    11
    differences between the instructions at issue in Kunselman and the
    instructions used in Stewart’s case are significant enough that
    Kunselman does not constitute controlling authority on point for the
    proposition that any error in the instructions at issue here was
    obvious beyond reasonable dispute. In Kunselman, the Court of
    Appeals rejected an instruction that, if the jury found the defendant
    not guilty of the indicted offense, it would “then and only then be
    authorized to consider the lesser included offense.” The instructions
    in this case did not expressly prohibit the jury from considering the
    lesser offense unless it first unanimously found Stewart not guilty
    of the greater offenses. In the absence of controlling authority on
    point, Stewart cannot meet the second prong of the plain-error test,
    and this claim of error fails. See Horton v. State, 
    310 Ga. 310
    , 324
    (3) (c) (849 SE2d 382) (2020); Hill, 310 Ga. at 194-195 (12) (a).
    2. Stewart contends that he received ineffective assistance of
    counsel, based on his attorney’s failure to object to the verdict form
    on the basis that it constituted an improper sequential jury
    instruction.
    12
    To prevail on his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,
    Stewart “must show both that his trial counsel’s performance was
    professionally deficient and that, but for such deficient performance,
    there is a reasonable probability that the result of the trial would
    have been different.” Wilkins v. State, 
    308 Ga. 131
    , 138 (4) (839 SE2d
    525) (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). See also Strickland
    v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
    , 687 (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674)
    (1984). To satisfy the deficiency prong, a defendant must
    demonstrate that his attorney “performed at trial in an objectively
    unreasonable way considering all the circumstances and in the light
    of prevailing professional norms.” Smith v. State, 
    308 Ga. 81
    , 87 (3)
    (839 SE2d 630) (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). “In
    examining an ineffectiveness claim, a court need not address both
    components of the inquiry if the defendant makes an insufficient
    showing on one.” Wilkins, 308 Ga. at 138 (4) (citation and
    punctuation omitted).
    Stewart has not shown under existing precedent that the
    verdict form clearly constituted an improper sequential jury
    13
    instruction, as explained in Division 1 (b), supra. Consequently,
    Stewart has not carried his burden of showing that his trial counsel’s
    failure to object to the verdict form was objectively unreasonable,
    and this claim therefore fails. See Smith, 308 Ga. at 89 (3) (holding
    that counsel’s performance was not deficient for failing to object to a
    jury instruction where the objection would have required a change,
    or at least a clarification, of binding precedent to prevail); Arrington
    v. Collins, 
    290 Ga. 603
    , 607-608 (3) (724 SE2d 372) (2012) (While a
    jury instruction that the jury “could consider the lesser-included
    offense of simple possession if it first found [the defendant] not
    guilty   of   trafficking”   deviated   from the   preferred    pattern
    instruction, it was not substantially different from charges which
    have been upheld on appeal, and appellate counsel therefore could
    not be held ineffective for failing to challenge the charge as
    “improper” on appeal.).
    3. Although Stewart does not raise the issue on appeal, we have
    identified a merger error in his sentencing. “When the only murder
    conviction is for felony murder and a defendant is convicted of both
    14
    felony murder and the predicate felony of the felony murder charge,
    the conviction for the predicate felony merges into the felony murder
    conviction.” Allen v. State, 
    307 Ga. 707
    , 711 (5) (838 SE2d 301)
    (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). See OCGA § 16-1-7 (a) (1)
    (When the same conduct of an accused may establish the
    commission of more than one crime, the accused may not “be
    convicted of more than one crime if . . . [o]ne crime is included in the
    other[.]”). Because the crime charged in Count 3, aggravated assault
    by shooting Johnson with a gun, was the predicate felony for the
    charge of felony murder in Count 2, the aggravated assault
    conviction merged with the felony murder conviction for sentencing
    purposes. See Allen, 307 Ga. at 710-711 (5). The trial court therefore
    erred in sentencing Stewart on Count 3, and the judgment is vacated
    in part to correct the merger error. See Hill v. State, 310 Ga. at 198
    (14); Allen, 307 Ga. at 711 (5). Stewart’s remaining argument about
    the sentence on Count 3 is therefore moot.
    Judgment affirmed in part and vacated in part. All the Justices
    concur.
    15