Rutland v. State ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •  NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court
    Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the
    opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any
    prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and
    official text of the opinion.
    In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: February 7, 2023
    S22A0916. RUTLAND v. THE STATE.
    LAGRUA, Justice.
    Appellant Israel Rutland was convicted of felony murder in
    connection with the deaths of Kelly Marie Prescott and Matthew
    Dean Horton resulting from a vehicular collision following a high-
    speed police chase.1 On appeal, Appellant contends in two related
    1Prescott and Horton died on November 12, 2013. On February 2, 2015,
    a Berrien County grand jury indicted Appellant for the following counts: felony
    murder of Prescott, predicated on fleeing and attempting to elude police
    officers (Count 1); felony murder of Horton, predicated on fleeing and
    attempting to elude police officers (Count 2); homicide by vehicle in the first
    degree of Prescott, predicated on fleeing and attempting to elude police officers
    (Count 3); homicide by vehicle in the first degree of Horton, predicated on
    fleeing and attempting to elude police officers (Count 4); serious injury by
    vehicle of Heidi Mancil (Count 5); fleeing and attempting to elude a police
    officer (Counts 6-11); aggravated assault on a peace officer (Counts 12-13);
    reckless conduct (Count 14); reckless driving (Count 15); driving under the
    influence (Count 16); driving while license suspended (Count 17); and failure
    to stop at a stop sign (Count 18).
    Prior to trial, the driving under the influence count (Count 16) was
    dismissed. Jury selection occurred from September 20 to 21, 2016, and
    Appellant was represented by counsel during jury selection. At a trial from
    claims that his convictions for felony murder and homicide by
    vehicle in the first degree constitute “inconsistent verdicts”
    requiring reversal. For the reasons explained below, we affirm.
    The evidence presented at trial showed that on November 12,
    2013, Appellant was driving through Tift County when a law
    enforcement officer attempted to pull him over to execute a pending
    arrest warrant. Appellant refused to pull over and led officers on a
    high-speed chase spanning multiple counties. Once in Berrien
    County, the Nashville Police Department deployed “stop sticks.”
    Though Appellant ran over the “stop sticks,” he never reduced his
    speed, lost control of his vehicle, or left his lane of travel. Shortly
    December 6 to December 15, 2016, Appellant represented himself, and his
    stand-by counsel presented closing argument. The jury found Appellant not
    guilty of two counts of aggravated assault on a peace officer (Counts 12 and 13)
    and reckless conduct (Count 14), but guilty of the remaining counts. The trial
    court merged the two counts of homicide by vehicle in the first degree (Counts
    3 and 4) into the two felony murder counts (Counts 1 and 2), and Appellant
    was sentenced to serve life in prison plus six years. Appellant filed a timely
    motion for new trial. After the motion-for-new-trial hearing, the trial court
    vacated one of Appellant’s convictions for fleeing and attempting to elude a
    police officer (Count 6), re-sentenced Appellant to serve life in prison plus five
    years, and otherwise denied the motion for new trial. Appellant filed a timely
    notice of appeal, and the case was docketed to this Court’s August 2022 term
    and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    2
    thereafter, he drove through an intersection with a stop sign and
    collided with a Trailblazer driven by Heidi Mancil. Mancil’s siblings,
    Prescott and Horton, were also occupants of the vehicle. Prescott and
    Horton were declared dead at the scene, and their cause of death
    was determined to be severe trauma as a result of the collision.
    Although Mancil survived, she suffered serious injuries and had to
    be life-flighted to the nearest hospital to treat her injuries.
    1. Appellant contends that the trial court erred when it
    accepted the jury’s guilty verdicts on felony murder and homicide by
    vehicle in the first degree because they were “inconsistent verdicts.”
    He argues that these verdicts were “inconsistent” because the felony
    murder convictions required a finding that Appellant “acted with
    criminal intent” and the homicide by vehicle convictions required a
    finding that Appellant “acted . . . [with] criminal negligence.” For
    the reasons explained below, this claim has no merit.
    “As a general rule, inconsistent verdicts occur when a jury in a
    criminal case renders seemingly incompatible verdicts of guilty on
    one charge and not guilty on another.” McElrath v. State, 
    308 Ga.
                                      3
    104, 108 (2) (a) (
    839 SE2d 573
    ) (2020) (emphasis in original). See
    also State v. Owens, 
    312 Ga. 212
    , 216 (1) (a) (
    862 SE2d 125
    ) (2021).
    An example of inconsistent verdicts is when a defendant is convicted
    of possession of a firearm during the commission of the crime of
    aggravated assault, but found not guilty of aggravated assault. See
    Coleman v. State, 
    286 Ga. 291
    , 295-296 (4) (
    687 SE2d 427
    ) (2009).
    Although this Court once viewed inconsistent verdicts as
    impermissible, we now allow inconsistent verdicts to stand,
    reasoning that “it is not generally within the 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.” McElrath, 308 Ga. at 109 (2) (a) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). But, we have acknowledged that “repugnant verdicts”
    require reversal. See id. at 111 (2) (c). “Repugnant verdicts” “occur
    when, in order to find the defendant not guilty on one count and
    guilty on another, the jury must make affirmative findings shown
    on the record that cannot logically or legally exist at the same time.”
    Id., at 111 (2) (c). An example of “repugnant verdicts” is when a
    4
    defendant is found guilty but mentally ill of felony murder and
    aggravated assault and not guilty of malice murder by reason of
    insanity. See id. at 112 (2) (c) (“Put simply, it is not legally possible
    for an individual to simultaneously be insane and not insane during
    a single criminal episode against a single victim, even if the episode
    gives rise to more than one crime.”).
    Here, Appellant contends that, although we no longer hold that
    inconsistent verdicts necessarily require reversal, the verdicts in
    this case should nonetheless be reversed. However, the guilty
    verdicts on felony murder and homicide by vehicle in the first degree
    cannot be classified as “inconsistent verdicts” or “repugnant
    verdicts” because the felony murder and homicide by vehicle verdicts
    consist only of guilty verdicts, rather than a guilty verdict and a not
    guilty verdict. Thus, Appellant’s claim has no merit.
    Although two or more guilty verdicts cannot be “inconsistent
    verdicts” or “repugnant verdicts” as we have defined those terms,
    they could be “mutually exclusive.” See McElrath, 308 Ga. at 110 (2)
    (b). But guilty verdicts are not mutually exclusive with one another
    5
    unless they “cannot legally exist simultaneously.” Id. An example of
    “mutually exclusive” verdicts is when a defendant is convicted of
    malice murder, an offense requiring a showing of the presence of
    malice aforethought, and vehicular homicide, an offense requiring a
    showing of the absence of malice aforethought. See Dumas v. State,
    
    266 Ga. 797
    , 799 (2) (
    471 SE2d 508
    ) (1996).
    Here, the guilty verdicts on felony murder and homicide by
    vehicle involve levels of mental culpability that are different in
    degree but not ones that, as in Dumas, “cannot legally exist
    simultaneously.” McElrath, 308 Ga. at 110 (2). See also OCGA § 16-
    5-1 (c) (defining felony murder as “in the commission of a felony,
    caus[ing] the death of another human being irrespective of malice”);
    OCGA § 40-6-393 (a) (defining first-degree homicide by vehicle as
    “caus[ing] the death of another person through [certain traffic
    offenses]” “without malice aforethought”). We have made clear that
    “multiple guilty verdicts for the same conduct that are based on
    varying levels of mens rea are not mutually exclusive.” Springer v.
    6
    State, 
    297 Ga. 376
    , 382 (1) (
    774 SE2d 106
    ) (2015).2 Accord Hinkson
    v. State 
    310 Ga. 388
    , 391-392 (2) (
    850 SE2d 41
    ) (2020). Thus, the
    verdicts here are neither inconsistent nor mutually exclusive, and
    Appellant’s claim also fails for this reason.
    2. Appellant also contends that the trial court erred by failing
    to instruct the jury that it could not find Appellant guilty of both
    felony murder and homicide by vehicle in the first degree. This claim
    fails.
    “Where a defendant does not request that the trial court give a
    jury instruction,” as Appellant did not here, “this Court only reviews
    for plain error.” Munn v. State, 
    313 Ga. 716
    , 722 (3) (
    873 SE2d 166
    )
    (2022).
    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
    We note that Springer explicitly overruled Walker v. State, 
    293 Ga. 709
    2
    (
    749 SE2d 663
    ) (2013), which reversed the defendant’s convictions for felony
    murder based on aggravated assault and homicide by vehicle based on reckless
    driving because they were “mutually exclusive.” See Springer, 
    297 Ga. at
    383
    n.4.
    7
    difficult, as it should be.
    Payne v. State, 
    314 Ga. 322
    , 325 (1) (
    877 SE2d 202
    ) (2022). This
    Court does not have to analyze all elements of the plain-error test
    where an appellant fails to establish one of them. See 
    id.
    For the reasons set forth in Division 1, we conclude that there
    was no error, plain or otherwise, in the trial court’s failure to
    instruct the jury that it could not find Appellant guilty of both felony
    murder and homicide by vehicle in the first degree and that any such
    instruction by the trial court would have been error. Cf. Booth v.
    State, 
    311 Ga. 374
    , 376 (1) (
    858 SE2d 39
    ) (2021) (concluding that the
    trial court made an “incorrect determination at trial that the
    verdicts were mutually exclusive” when it vacated the verdicts and
    “charged the jury that they could not enter guilty verdicts on both
    felony murder and involuntary manslaughter and could not enter
    guilty verdicts on both neglect to an elder person and reckless
    conduct”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S22A0916

Filed Date: 2/7/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/7/2023