Collymore v. State , 298 Ga. 335 ( 2016 )


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  • In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: January 19, 2016
    S15A1509. COLLYMORE v. THE STATE.
    MELTON, Justice.
    Following a jury trial, Fernando Collymore was found guilty of the felony
    murder of Rosita Gates as well as the theft by taking of Gates’s vehicle.1
    Collymore now appeals, contending that the trial court: (1) gave the jury an
    improper charge on the concept of “accident;” (2) improperly sentenced him to
    a felony rather than a misdemeanor for theft by taking; and (3) improperly
    allowed the jury to use a yardstick and a ruler during deliberations. For the
    reasons set forth below, we affirm.
    1
    On February 9, 2012, Collymore was indicted for malice murder, felony
    murder predicated on aggravated assault, and theft by taking. Following a jury
    trial ending on August 23, 2013, Collymore was found guilty of felony murder
    and theft by taking, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment for felony
    murder with ten concurrent years for theft by taking. On August 27, 2013,
    Collymore filed a motion for new trial, amended on May 30, 2014, which the
    trial court denied on September 9, 2014. Collymore filed a timely notice of
    appeal, and his case, submitted for decision on the briefs, was docketed to the
    September 2015 Term of this Court.
    1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the record shows
    that, on September 5, 2011, Gates told friends that she intended to break up with
    her live-in boyfriend, Collymore, on the following day. On the morning of
    September 6, 2011, Terrieon Dennard, Gates’s son, was sitting downstairs in his
    mother’s house when he heard her screaming his name from her bedroom.
    Terrieon ran upstairs to discover that the bedroom door was locked. Inside,
    Gates continued to scream for assistance, and she told Terrieon to call police and
    let them know that Collymore had a gun. Terrieon heard continued fighting
    inside the bedroom, and he ran downstairs to call for help. While downstairs, he
    heard a single gunshot, and he ran out of the house. Moments later, Terrieon
    witnessed Collymore leave the house with a gun in his hand. Collymore then
    fled to New York in Gates’s 2009 Ford Taurus. When police arrived, Gates was
    discovered in the bedroom with a fatal gunshot wound to her chest. Forensic
    testing showed that there was no gunpowder on Gates’s shirt, so, according to
    a firearms expert, Collymore had to be at least three-and-a-half feet away at the
    time that he pulled the trigger of the gun. After he was apprehended, Collymore
    contended that the shooting was an accident, maintaining that he was attempting
    to kill himself and that the gun went off when Gates tried to take it away from
    2
    him. To counter this contention, the State put forth evidence showing that, when
    she was a child, Gates accidentally shot and killed her mother in a firearm
    accident. As a result, Gates was phobic of guns and repeatedly said that she
    would never touch one again.
    This evidence was sufficient to enable the jury to find Collymore guilty
    of the crimes for which he was convicted beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson
    v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
    2. Collymore contends that the trial court gave the jury an incomplete
    charge on accident because it removed references to criminal negligence from
    the pattern jury charge.2 Pretermitting whether the trial court erred by omitting
    2
    The pattern charge states:
    No person shall be found guilty of any crime committed by
    misfortune or accident in which there was no criminal scheme,
    undertaking, or intention (or criminal negligence). An accident is an
    event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation, that
    takes place, or begins to exist, without design. If you find from the
    evidence in this case that the incident that is the subject matter of
    this case occurred as a result of misfortune or accident and not as a
    result of a criminal undertaking or criminal negligence, then it
    would be your duty to acquit the defendant. When the issue of
    accident is raised, the burden is on the State to negate or disprove
    it beyond a reasonable doubt. Any evidence as to misfortune or
    accident should be considered by you in connection with all of the
    other evidence in the case. If in doing so, you should entertain a
    3
    the phrase “criminal negligence” under the facts of this case, there
    is no likelihood that the omission affected the outcome of the trial.
    The instruction as given informed the jury that for it to find
    [Collymore] not guilty by reason of accident, there must be “no
    criminal scheme, undertaking, or intention.” [Collymore] now
    argues that the jury should have been informed instead that there
    must be “no criminal scheme, undertaking, intention, or criminal
    negligence.” Thus, the effect of the trial court's omission was to
    remove from the jury's consideration one factor, to wit, criminal
    negligence, that would be required for it to find that [Collymore]
    was not guilty by reason of accident. Put another way, what
    [Collymore] now claims to be the proper instruction would require
    the jury to make an additional finding before it could find him not
    guilty than it had to do under the instruction given at trial.
    Accordingly, as the instruction given actually made it easier for the
    jury to acquit [Collymore] than the instruction he now prefers
    would, we cannot conclude that the omission of the term “criminal
    negligence” from the instruction on accident affected the outcome
    of his trial.
    (Citation omitted.) Mathis v. State, 
    293 Ga. 35
    , 40-41 (3) (743 SE2d 393)
    (2013). There was no reversible error.
    3. Collymore argues that the trial court erred by sentencing him for a
    felony for the theft of Gates’s car rather than for a misdemeanor. We disagree.
    reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused, it would be your
    duty to acquit. On the other hand, should you believe from the
    evidence as a whole that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable
    doubt, you may convict.
    4
    “[I]t has long been the law in this state that, in general, a crime is to be
    construed and punished according to the provisions of the law existing at the
    time of its commission.” (Citations omitted.) Fleming v. State, 
    271 Ga. 587
    , 589
    (523 SE2d 315) (1999). The theft of Gates’s vehicle occurred on September 6,
    2011, and the version of OCGA § 16-8-12 (a) (5) (A) that was effective from
    July 1, 2009 to June 30, 2012, provided, in relevant part:
    if the property which was the subject of the theft was a motor
    vehicle or was a motor vehicle part or component which exceeded
    $100.00 in value . . . [the theft may be punished] by imprisonment
    for not less than one nor more than ten years or, in the discretion of
    the trial judge, as for a misdemeanor; provided, however, that any
    person who is convicted of a second or subsequent offense under
    this paragraph shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than
    one year nor more than 20 years.
    (Emphasis supplied.)3 As Collymore was found guilty for the theft of a motor
    vehicle,4 it was in the discretion of the trial court to sentence Collymore to a
    3
    Effective July 1, 2012, the reference to motor vehicles was removed from
    the statute, which generally limited felony punishment to the theft of property
    exceeding $1,500 in value.
    4
    Collymore also makes an alternative argument that the version of OCGA
    § 16-8-12 (a) (5) (A) applicable to this case should be interpreted to require
    proof that any stolen motor vehicle, itself, and not just any stolen part or
    component, must exceed $100 in value. Even if this interpretation were correct,
    the evidence shows that Collymore stole a functioning 2009 Ford Taurus, a
    5
    felony for the theft of Gates’s car. As such, Collymore’s felony sentence for
    theft by taking was proper.
    4. Collymore contends that the trial court erred by allowing the jury to use
    a yardstick and a ruler during its deliberations. Again, we disagree.
    The record shows that, during the presentation of its case, the State called
    a firearms expert to testify regarding the distance from which Gates was shot.
    Based on the absence of gun powder on Gates, the expert opined that the gun
    had to have been at least three-and-a-half feet away from her when it was fired.
    It is undisputed that, during the expert’s testimony, a yardstick was used to show
    this distance. Later, after deliberations had begun, the jury requested use of both
    the yardstick and a ruler, and the trial court allowed use of both, over
    Collymore’s objection. This decision was not erroneous. See, e.g., Carson v.
    State, 
    241 Ga. 622
    , 626 (3) (247 SE2d 68) (1978). In this case, the yardstick and
    the ruler did not have the effect of introducing new evidence. They were merely
    standard measuring devices which allowed the jurors to examine evidence, and
    the accuracy of the devices was never questioned. 
    Id. In any
    event, even if there
    vehicle clearly worth more than the nominal amount in the statute.
    6
    had been error in allowing the measuring devices to go out with the jury, it is
    uncontested that the same yardstick used by the jury had been previously used
    during testimony to illustrate the distance being described by the firearms
    expert. Thus, under the facts and circumstances of this case, there was neither
    error nor harm.
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S15A1509

Citation Numbers: 298 Ga. 335, 782 S.E.2d 7, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 77

Judges: Melton

Filed Date: 1/19/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2024