Smith v. State , 298 Ga. 406 ( 2016 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: February 1, 2016
    S15A1705. SMITH v. THE STATE.
    NAHMIAS, Justice.
    Appellant Christopher Anton Smith challenges his convictions for malice
    murder and other crimes in connection with an armed robbery during which
    Russell Roland was fatally shot and Victor Powell was injured. Appellant
    contends that his right to be present during trial was violated when the court
    removed a prospective juror from the venire when Appellant was not in the
    courtroom and that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance in several
    ways. We reject these contentions and affirm Appellant’s convictions, but we
    vacate the trial court’s judgment in part and remand the case for correction of
    sentencing errors that we have identified.1
    1
    The crimes occurred on December 29, 2007. Appellant’s first trial in November 2010
    ended with a hung jury. On January 7, 2011, Appellant was re-indicted on charges of malice murder,
    three counts of felony murder, armed robbery, two counts of aggravated assault, possession of a
    firearm by a convicted felon, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime. At his
    second trial from January 19 to 24, 2011, the jury found Appellant guilty of all charges. The trial
    court sentenced him to serve life in prison for malice murder, 20 consecutive years for the aggravated
    assault of Powell, and five more years for possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.
    1.      Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence at
    trial showed the following. On December 29, 2007, at around 4:00 a.m., Victor
    Powell was walking home from a friend’s place in southeast Atlanta when he
    passed by the house of a man he knew as “Quan,” who had hired Powell to do
    work on the house. Powell saw lights on inside and decided to stop by to see if
    Quan would pay him for the work that he had completed. Russell Roland, a
    drug dealer who had been staying at Quan’s house, answered the door and let
    Powell in. Quan and his girlfriend were out at a club, and Powell decided to
    wait with Roland until Quan returned home.
    Powell saw a black car pull into the driveway and a man walking to the
    door. The man knocked and identified himself as “Lil’ Chris from College
    Park.” Roland said that he knew the man, so Powell opened the door and let
    him in. Chris said that he and some friends had a flat-screen television that they
    wanted to sell, and Roland agreed to buy the TV with cash and cocaine. Chris
    The felony murder counts were vacated by operation of law, and the trial court merged the remaining
    three counts for sentencing (which was error as to two of those counts, as explained in Division 4
    below). On February 1, 2011, Appellant filed a motion for new trial, which he amended with new
    counsel on September 16 and October 1, 2013. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied
    the motion on April 15, 2014. Appellant filed a motion for out-of-time appeal on August 28, 2014,
    which was granted on September 5, 2014. Appellant then filed a timely notice of appeal, and the
    case was docketed in this Court for the September 2015 term and orally argued on October 20, 2015.
    2
    went back outside and then returned with two other men. At this point, Quan’s
    girlfriend, Shawnell Johnson, returned from the club in a cab and came inside
    the house to retrieve her wallet and car keys. The cab driver also came in and
    bought $150 worth of cocaine from Roland. Roland put the $150 in his pocket,
    where he already had several thousand dollars in cash.
    After Johnson left with the cab driver, one of the men who had entered the
    house with Chris shot Powell in the leg, put a gun to his head, and told him not
    to move, while Chris and his other associate pulled out guns and demanded
    money and drugs from Roland. Roland gave Chris the money in his pocket and
    directed him to a cigar box where he kept his drugs, which Chris also took. The
    three assailants then shot Roland multiple times before fleeing. Johnson and the
    cab driver heard gunshots as they drove away. Roland died at the scene; Powell
    survived.
    The day after the incident, the police interviewed Powell, who gave
    descriptions of the three assailants. Powell described the man who first came
    into the house – Chris – as having a tattoo on his neck and a mole or mark on his
    face; Appellant – Christopher Smith – has such a tattoo and mark. Powell also
    said that he had seen a black Monte Carlo or Camry and a red car outside of the
    3
    house. Johnson identified Appellant in a photographic lineup and at trial as one
    of the men she saw in the house with Roland and Powell. Atlanta Police
    Detective Nicole Redlinger testified that Appellant was known as “Little Chris,”
    lived in College Park, and drove a black Monte Carlo. A drug scale with
    suspected cocaine residue and a small amount of marijuana were found in
    Appellant’s residence at the time of his arrest.2
    Appellant does not challenge the legal sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting his convictions. Nevertheless, in accordance with this Court’s
    practice in murder cases, we have reviewed the record and conclude that, when
    viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence presented at trial
    and summarized above was sufficient to authorize a rational jury to find
    Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which he was
    convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d
    560) (1979). See also Vega v. State, 
    285 Ga. 32
    , 33 (673 SE2d 223) (2009) (“‘It
    was for the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses and to resolve any
    conflicts or inconsistencies in the evidence.’” (citation omitted)).
    2
    The record does not indicate if the other two assailants were ever identified or arrested.
    4
    2.    Appellant contends that his constitutional right to be present at trial
    was violated because a portion of the proceeding – the removal of a prospective
    juror – occurred when he was not in the courtroom. During general voir dire on
    the first morning of the trial, Juror #33 raised her hand in response to a question
    about whether anyone in the venire had experienced something that would
    prevent him or her from being impartial. After most of the jury pool was
    excused for a lunch break, Juror #33 and several other prospective jurors, most
    of whom had noted potential hardships if required to serve, were questioned
    individually. With Appellant present, one of the jurors (#25) was questioned,
    expressed his inability to be impartial because he and his family had been the
    victims of violent crimes, and was removed from the venire by the trial court for
    cause on motion by Appellant’s counsel.          Another juror (#28) was also
    questioned due to concerns about impartiality, but was not removed.
    A few minutes later, with Appellant still present, Juror #33 was brought
    in to the courtroom. In response to questioning by the court and counsel for
    both parties, she explained that she could not be fair and impartial in this case
    because her grandmother had been shot and permanently injured in an armed
    robbery. Immediately after Juror #33 left the courtroom, Appellant’s counsel
    5
    said that Appellant urgently needed to use the restroom, and the court gave its
    permission.    After Appellant left the courtroom, the prosecutor asked
    Appellant’s counsel if he had a motion. Appellant’s counsel said that he did and
    that he could make it when Appellant got back from the restroom. The
    prosecutor said, “okay.” The court then asked, “Are you going to want to be
    heard on 33?” and the prosecutor replied, “No.” The court said, “All right. I am
    going to remove 33 without objection. You need to do it again when your client
    is here. . . . I want a perfect record.” Appellant then returned from the restroom,
    and the court said, “All right. Let’s have our next juror in, please. Let’s hurry
    it up, 39, then 40.” Perhaps due to the hurry, no motion to strike Juror #33 was
    repeated in Appellant’s presence.
    The United States Supreme Court has long recognized that a
    criminal defendant’s right to be present at all critical stages of the
    proceedings against him is a fundamental right and a foundational
    aspect of due process of law. This Court’s interpretation of the
    analogous provisions of the Georgia Constitution has always been
    in accord.
    Hampton v. State, 
    282 Ga. 490
    , 492 (651 SE2d 698) (2007) (footnotes omitted).
    As both parties recognize, under this doctrine, Appellant had the right to be
    present during the discussion that led to Juror #33’s removal for cause. See
    6
    Zamora v. State, 
    291 Ga. 512
    , 517-518 (731 SE2d 658) (2012) (reiterating that
    “‘[p]roceedings at which the jury composition is selected or changed are . . .
    critical stage[s] at which the defendant is entitled to be present.’” (citation
    omitted)). However,
    the right to be present belongs to the defendant and the defendant
    is free to relinquish that right if he or she so chooses. “The right is
    waived if the defendant personally waives it in court; if counsel
    waives it at the defendant’s express direction; if counsel waives it
    in open court while the defendant is present; or if counsel waives it
    and the defendant subsequently acquiesces in the waiver.”
    Ward v. State, 
    288 Ga. 641
    , 646 (706 SE2d 430) (2011) (citation omitted).
    In this case, it is clear that Appellant did not personally waive in court his
    right to be present for the discussion of Juror #33’s removal, and his counsel did
    not waive Appellant’s right to be present at his express direction or in his
    presence.3 However, the record shows that Appellant acquiesced in the removal
    of Juror #33 in his absence. “Acquiescence means a tacit consent to acts or
    conditions, and implies a knowledge of those things which are acquiesced in.”
    Id. at 646 (citations and quotation marks omitted). And while Appellant was not
    3
    The State asserts that Appellant likely discussed the removal of Juror #33 with his counsel,
    but the record contains no evidence of such a discussion. Indeed, neither the State nor Appellant
    questioned his trial counsel about this issue at the motion for new trial hearing (and Appellant did
    not testify).
    7
    present during the brief period when the trial court and lawyers discussed
    removing Juror #33 and when the court actually struck the juror for cause, he
    was present in the courtroom on four later occasions when Juror #33’s removal
    by the court was expressly noted – yet Appellant raised no question or concern
    about her removal.
    To begin with, Appellant knew about the process by which prospective
    jurors could be removed by the court due to an expressed lack of impartiality,
    as the court had removed another juror for a very similar reason, on Appellant’s
    counsel’s motion and in Appellant’s presence, just minutes before Juror #33
    was questioned. Appellant was also present for the entirety of the individual
    voir dire where Juror #33 clearly articulated why she could not be impartial, so
    he knew the actual reason for her removal. Compare Zamora, 
    291 Ga. at 519
    (noting that the defendant was unaware at trial of the reasons for removal of the
    juror in question, which were discussed only in bench conferences that he could
    not hear). And Appellant obviously knew that Juror #33 had been removed, as
    she did not sit on the jury that was selected the next day to decide his case and
    proceeded to do so for the next several days. See 
    id.
     (noting that the defendant
    could presumably see the removed trial juror turn in his badge and leave the
    8
    courtroom during the final bench conference). Indeed, the record indicates that
    the prospective jurors who had been removed during the individual questioning
    discussed above did not return to the courtroom after the lunch break, so Juror
    #33 would not have been present for the remainder of the jury selection process.
    Most important, the fact that Juror #33 had been removed from the jury
    pool as a result of the interchange between counsel and the court was discussed
    in Appellant’s presence four separate times between his bathroom break and the
    final selection of the trial jury the next day. First, right after the lunch break, the
    court and counsel reviewed which prospective jurors had already been removed;
    Appellant’s counsel specifically listed Juror #33 and the court confirmed that.
    Second, after the remaining jurors reentered the courtroom, the court told them
    (and Appellant) that Juror #33 was one of the jurors whom “we have questioned
    . . . individually and excused . . . on threshold issues.” Third, a few minutes
    later, before allowing the remaining jurors to leave for the day, the court again
    went through the list of jurors who had already been removed, specifically
    mentioning Juror #33, and adding a few more jurors whom the court removed
    for hardship. Finally, after the completion of voir dire the next morning and
    before the parties selected the jury, the court, Appellant’s counsel, and the
    9
    prosecutor, after considerable additional discussion and argument regarding
    striking jurors for cause or hardship, went through the list of removed jurors and
    once again confirmed that Juror #33 had been removed. Once the 12 trial jurors
    and an alternate were selected and seated in the jury box – without Juror #33 –
    Appellant’s counsel was asked by the court, “Is this the jury you selected?” He
    answered “Yes.” Appellant was present for each of these discussions, but there
    is no indication in the record that he ever raised a question or voiced an
    objection to his counsel or the trial court at any point during the trial regarding
    Juror #33’s removal. The first time that Appellant contended that his right to be
    present was violated was in his amended motion for new trial, which was filed
    over two years after the trial.4
    Under these circumstances, we conclude that Appellant acquiesced in the
    limited trial proceeding that occurred in his absence. See Zamora, 
    291 Ga. at 520
     (holding that the defendant acquiesced in the dismissal of a trial juror at a
    4
    In this respect, it is worth noting that while our precedents would not require Appellant to
    show actual prejudice had he properly asserted his right to be present during Juror #33’s removal,
    he has not suggested, even on appeal, any way in which his presence during the discussion of her
    removal would have changed the outcome of his trial, nor has he ever suggested why he would have
    wanted Juror #33, who clearly expressed her partiality against his case, to serve on his jury. See
    Zamora, 
    291 Ga. at
    520 n.4.
    10
    bench conference that occurred in his absence, where he did not voice any
    objection until his appeal brief). See also Jackson v. State, 
    278 Ga. 235
    , 237
    (599 SE2d 129) (2004) (holding that the appellants “acquiesced in the
    proceedings [occurring in their absence] when their counsel made no objection
    and appellants thereafter remained silent after the subject was brought to their
    attention”); Hanifa v. State, 
    269 Ga. 797
    , 807 (505 SE2d 731) (1998) (finding
    acquiescence where the defendant failed to object after learning prior to the
    return of the jury’s verdicts that the court had spoken with the jury outside of the
    his presence).5
    3.      Appellant contends that he received ineffective assistance from his
    trial counsel due to two differences in his first and second trials and due to
    counsel’s failure at the second trial to correct or object to certain testimony by
    5
    Compare Ward, 288 Ga. at 646 (holding that because the defendants were not informed
    of a trial juror’s removal outside their presence or the reason for the removal, they could not
    knowingly acquiesce to the waiver by their attorneys); Sammons v. State, 
    279 Ga. 386
    , 388 (612
    SE2d 785) (2005) (holding that the defendant, who learned during trial that a juror had been replaced
    outside her presence, but not the reason for the juror’s removal, and told her counsel – who failed
    to take any action – that she did not want the juror replaced, did not “acquiesce in the illegal
    proceedings in her absence and repudiated trial counsel’s apparent silent waiver of her rights at the
    first opportunity”); Pennie v. State, 
    271 Ga. 419
    , 423 (520 SE2d 448) (1999) (holding that where the
    defendant only learned after trial about a discussion in chambers in her absence regarding the
    potential removal of a juror who was left on the jury, there was no acquiescence, because she raised
    the issue at the first opportunity on motion for new trial).
    11
    Detective Redlinger.
    (a)   To establish that his trial counsel was constitutionally
    ineffective, Appellant was required to prove both deficient performance by
    counsel and resulting prejudice. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    687, 694 (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984). To prove deficient performance,
    Appellant had to demonstrate that counsel performed his duties in an objectively
    unreasonable way, considering all the circumstances and in the light of
    prevailing professional norms. See 
    id. at 687-688
    . Because “[j]udicial scrutiny
    of counsel’s performance must be highly deferential,” the law recognizes a
    “strong presumption” that counsel performed reasonably, and the defendant
    bears the burden of overcoming this presumption. See 
    id. at 689
    . Accord
    Humphrey v. Nance, 
    293 Ga. 189
    , 191-192 (744 SE2d 706) (2013). To carry
    this burden, Appellant must show that no reasonable lawyer would have done
    what his counsel did, or failed to do what his counsel did not do. See Nance,
    
    293 Ga. at 192
    . In particular, “decisions regarding trial tactics and strategy may
    form the basis for an ineffectiveness claim only if they were so patently
    unreasonable that no competent attorney would have followed such a course.”
    Reed v. State, 
    294 Ga. 877
    , 882 (757 SE2d 84) (2014).
    12
    Even if a defendant can prove that his counsel’s performance was
    deficient, he must also prove prejudice by showing “a reasonable probability
    that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
    have been different.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    . “It is not enough to show
    that the errors had some conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding.”
    Harrington v. Richter, 
    562 U.S. 86
    , 104 (131 SCt 770, 178 LE2d 624) (2011)
    (citation and punctuation omitted). Rather, the defendant must demonstrate a
    “reasonable probability” of a different result, which, the United States Supreme
    Court has explained, is “a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    .
    In all, the burden of proving a denial of effective assistance of counsel is
    a heavy one. See Humphrey v. Walker, 
    294 Ga. 855
    , 860 (757 SE2d 68) (2014).
    Appellant has not met that burden.
    (b)    Appellant’s initial claims deal with two differences in the
    ways that his first and second trials unfolded. First, Appellant contends that his
    trial counsel, who represented him in both trials, performed deficiently in failing
    to properly cross-examine Shawnell Johnson as to her identification of
    Appellant. Appellant notes that in the first trial, when Johnson was asked why
    13
    she identified Appellant’s picture in a photographic lineup, she said, “I
    remembered what I thought at the time was a scar or . . . a tattoo. That’s all I
    remembered on the photograph.” Similarly, when asked how she recognized
    Appellant after identifying him in court, Johnson answered, “From the scar that
    I seen on the man’s face in the house.” In the second trial, Johnson testified that
    she identified Appellant in the photographic lineup because she “recognized the
    face as the person that [she] remembered being in the home” and that she “just
    recognized him right off.” Appellant maintains that his counsel performed
    deficiently in the second trial by failing to press Johnson on how she recognized
    Appellant, which he asserts would have revealed that Johnson’s identification
    was not based on recognizing his face.
    Appellant, however, reads too much into the quoted snippets from
    Johnson’s testimony at the first trial. Johnson never said that she did not
    recognize Appellant’s face generally, only that she focused on the scar or tattoo
    on his face. If Appellant’s counsel had pressed Johnson at the second trial to
    elaborate on the basis for her identification of Appellant, her answer might have
    hurt Appellant rather than helping him as he speculates; we note that Appellant
    did not call Johnson to testify at the motion for new trial hearing to pursue the
    14
    line of questioning that he asserts would have helped him. Appellant’s trial
    counsel sought to impeach Johnson’s identification testimony at the second trial
    in another way, by questioning her ability to remember various details about the
    three men she saw inside the house on the night of the shooting. The scope and
    content of cross-examination are grounded in trial tactics and strategy and thus
    will rarely constitute deficient performance, see Cooper v. State, 
    281 Ga. 760
    ,
    762 (642 SE2d 817) (2007), and we cannot say that trial counsel’s approach was
    patently unreasonable. See Reed, 294 Ga. at 882.
    Second, Appellant claims that his trial counsel performed deficiently in
    not asking Johnson in the second trial whether she recognized Detective
    Redlinger in order to show Johnson’s alleged “demonstrated inability to identify
    people.” This claim rests on Johnson’s testimony in the first trial that she could
    not identify Detective Redlinger in court or remember what the detective looked
    like, because she had not seen Detective Redlinger since she gave her written
    statement to the detective three years earlier. But Johnson’s inability to
    recognize Detective Redlinger years after giving the detective a statement had
    little bearing on her specific identification of Appellant in the photographic
    lineup a few days after seeing Appellant in her boyfriend’s house just before the
    15
    shooting there, and it does not demonstrate that Johnson was generally unable
    to identify people. Appellant again failed to show that his counsel’s decision
    not to cross-examine Johnson on this point at the second trial was patently
    unreasonable. See id. Moreover, Johnson did not testify at the motion for new
    trial hearing, so Appellant did not establish whether she would have been able
    to identify Detective Redlinger if asked at the second trial. Appellant therefore
    failed to prove either deficiency or prejudice on this claim.
    (c)    Appellant claims that his counsel provided ineffective
    assistance at his second trial in other respects. First, Victor Powell testified at
    the second trial that he identified Appellant in a photographic lineup as one of
    the men present when he and Roland were shot, although it is undisputed that
    Powell did not in fact identify Appellant in a photographic lineup. Appellant
    claims that Detective Redlinger’s testimony erroneously implied that the reason
    that Powell failed to pick out Appellant was because Appellant’s picture was not
    included in the lineup that Powell was shown, and that his counsel’s failure to
    correct this misleading testimony was deficient performance.            Appellant
    contends that as a result, the fact that Powell was shown a lineup that included
    Appellant’s picture but failed to pick him out was unknown to the jury.
    16
    This claim rests on an inaccurate premise. The prosecutor established on
    direct examination of Detective Redlinger that Powell was shown “a few
    different lineups on a few different occasions,” at least one of which contained
    a picture of Appellant, and that Powell did not pick out Appellant as one of the
    men present when Powell and Roland were shot. Appellant’s counsel then
    asked Detective Redlinger on cross-examination about one of the lineups she
    had shown to Powell, and she testified that that particular lineup did not include
    a picture of Appellant and that Powell was unable to identify anyone in the
    lineup. Detective Redlinger’s testimony was therefore not misleading, and
    Appellant’s counsel was not deficient in failing to “correct” it. Furthermore, if
    there was any confusion, Appellant has failed to show prejudice, because the
    prosecutor told the jury explicitly during closing arguments that Powell’s
    testimony about picking out Appellant in a photographic lineup was incorrect
    and that Powell was shown a lineup that contained Appellant’s picture and he
    was unable to identify Appellant.
    Appellant also claims that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to
    object on either hearsay or Confrontation Clause grounds to certain testimony
    by Detective Redlinger. Appellant first argues that his counsel should have
    17
    objected when the prosecutor questioned Detective Redlinger about whether her
    investigation had connected the name “Lil’ Chris” to Appellant. At the first
    trial, however, the State had brought in a witness who directly tied Appellant to
    the nickname “Little Chris.” Counsel’s refraining at the second trial from
    objecting to the detective’s testimony directly linking Appellant to the nickname
    was a strategic decision that Appellant has not shown was unreasonable or
    caused prejudice, particularly in the absence of evidence that the witness called
    at the first trial was unavailable to testify at the second trial. See Hartsfield v.
    State, 
    294 Ga. 883
    , 889 (757 SE2d 90) (2014) (explaining that “it was a
    reasonable trial strategy not to object [to the hearsay] because if the objection
    had been sustained, the State could have called the declarants to testify.”).
    Appellant finally contends that his trial counsel should have objected
    when Detective Redlinger testified that during the course of her investigation,
    she identified two other persons of interest from College Park named Chris but
    ultimately “was able to verify that they did not have involvement [in the
    shooting], or there was no evidence to suggest that they had any involvement,
    . . . based on interviewing and alibis.” This testimony was not clearly hearsay
    or subject to a Confrontation Clause objection, because the detective did not
    18
    repeat the substance of what someone else told her but rather explained
    summarily why she had concluded that the other two men named Chris were not
    viable suspects. See Johnson v. State, 
    289 Ga. 22
    , 26-27 (709 SE2d 217)
    (2011). Moreover, even assuming that some aspect of this testimony was
    inadmissible, no prejudice has been established because Appellant failed to
    show a reasonable probability that the absence of the disputed testimony would
    have changed the outcome of his trial, as there is no evidence that either of the
    other two Chrises actually had something to do with the shooting at Quan’s
    house.
    Accordingly, these ineffective assistance claims also fail.
    4.    A sentencing error involving merger of counts may be corrected on
    appeal even if the issue was not raised by the parties. See Hulett v. State, 
    296 Ga. 49
    , 54 (766 SE2d 1) (2014). As set out in footnote 1 above, the jury found
    Appellant guilty of malice murder, three counts of felony murder, armed
    robbery, two counts of aggravated assault, possession of a firearm by a
    convicted felon, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime.
    The trial court sentenced Appellant only for malice murder, the aggravated
    assault of Powell, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime,
    19
    merging the armed robbery, aggravated assault of Roland, and possession of a
    firearm by a convicted felon counts into the felony murder counts that were
    based on those felonies. Upon conviction of the malice murder count involving
    the same victim, however, the felony murder counts were vacated by operation
    of law, and having been vacated, no other count could be merged into them. See
    
    id. at 53
    .
    Nevertheless, the aggravated assault of Roland (the murder victim)
    merged into the malice murder count as a matter of fact. See 
    id. at 55
    . Thus, the
    trial court did not err by not entering a sentence on that aggravated assault count.
    However, the court erred in not sentencing Appellant for the armed robbery
    (Count 5) and for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon (Count 8), which
    did not merge into the malice murder conviction. See 
    id. at 55-56
    . Accordingly,
    we vacate the trial court’s judgment in part and remand the case for Appellant
    to be sentenced on those two counts. See 
    id. at 56
    .
    Judgment affirmed in part and vacated in part, and case remanded with
    direction. All the Justices concur.
    20