Fuller 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: April 18, 2023
    S23A0057. FULLER v. THE STATE.
    COLVIN, Justice.
    Following a jury trial, Brandon Fuller was convicted of malice
    murder and possession of a firearm during the commission of a
    felony in connection with the shooting death of Daniel Landy. 1 On
    appeal, Fuller alleges that he was denied constitutionally effective
    assistance of counsel and that the cumulative effect of trial counsel’s
    On October 26, 2016, a Chatham County grand jury indicted Fuller for
    1
    malice murder (Count 1), felony murder predicated on aggravated assault
    (Count 4), aggravated assault (Count 3), and two counts of possession of a
    firearm during the commission of a felony (Counts 2 & 5). A jury trial was held
    December 10 through 12, 2019, and the jury found Fuller guilty of all counts.
    Fuller was sentenced to life in prison for malice murder and a consecutive 5
    years’ probation for the firearm charge listed in Count 2. All remaining counts
    were either vacated by operation of law or merged for sentencing purposes.
    Fuller timely filed a motion for new trial on January 21, 2020, which was
    amended through new counsel on June 3, 2020. After a hearing, the trial court
    denied the motion as amended on June 21, 2022. Fuller timely filed a notice
    of appeal. The appeal was docketed to the term of this Court beginning in
    December 2022 and was submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    errors prejudiced him. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
    1.    In August 2016, Fuller shared a one-year-old child with
    Crystal Fludd. Landy was living with Fludd and the child, with
    whom      he   had   developed     a   father-daughter-type     bond.
    Approximately one month prior to the shooting, Fuller sent Fludd a
    direct message on social media threatening to kill Landy and Fludd
    and take the child. One week prior to the shooting, Fludd threw a
    birthday party for the child. Fuller was invited to the party but did
    not attend. Landy, however, did attend. After the party, Fludd
    posted pictures on social media of Fludd, Landy, and the child
    together. Though Landy and Fuller had never met in person, Fuller
    knew who Landy was based upon the pictures Fludd posted of him
    on social media.
    During the late evening hours of August 19, 2016, Lorenzo
    Stevens was sitting outside of a gas station convenience store located
    in Chatham County. There, he saw Fuller and Landy talking as
    they exited the store. Stevens testified that neither man sounded
    upset, but that they were arguing. At one point, he heard Landy
    2
    say, “I take care of that baby, I just gave that baby a birthday party,”
    to which Fuller said, “[W]ell, okay, so you did that.” Stevens testified
    that he saw Landy slap Fuller and that Fuller looked shocked.
    Stevens testified that he “pull[ed his] attention away from them
    [be]cause I saw where this was goin[g].” Shortly thereafter, Stevens
    heard gunshots and saw Landy running away from the gunfire.
    Stevens did not see Landy with a gun at any time.
    Surveillance footage from the convenience store was recovered
    and presented to the jury. The footage, which is approximately
    seven minutes in length, showed Fuller and Landy waiting in
    separate lines inside the convenience store. Landy paid for his items
    and then walked by Fuller, who was still waiting in line. Fuller
    appeared to call over to Landy, and the men began talking. After
    two and a half minutes, Fuller paid for his items, and the men
    continued to talk outside the store. A few minutes later, the men
    started to argue. A little over one minute later, Fuller pulled a gun
    from his pocket and pointed it at Landy. Landy put his hands up
    and started to back away. Fuller tried to fire the gun, but it did not
    3
    shoot. Landy continued to back away, and Fuller pursued him while
    racking the slide of his gun.     Fuller then successfully fired the
    weapon twice at Landy as Landy ran away. Thereafter, Fuller put
    the gun back into his pants pocket and casually walked away.
    When the police arrived at the scene, they found Landy in the
    street. He was unresponsive and had suffered two gunshot wounds
    to the back. During their investigation, the police located two live
    9mm cartridges in front of the convenience store – one had a firing
    pin impression, and one did not.       At trial, the State presented
    testimony to the jury that this physical evidence showed “there was
    a misfire . . . the hammer or firing pin struck the back [of the
    cartridge] and it did not fire and it was then ejected from the pistol.”
    The presence of the live round without the firing pin impression
    showed that it was manually ejected from the firearm rather than
    through a trigger pull.
    The police spoke with Fludd, and she identified Fuller as the
    shooter in the video. She also showed officers a social media post
    from Fuller’s page wherein he shared a local news article about the
    4
    shooting approximately 30 minutes after it had occurred.
    Fuller      was   arrested   and,   during   an   interview   with
    investigators, he stated that he recognized Landy at the convenience
    store and, after engaging in conversation, told Landy to stop
    “disrespecting” him by “claiming” his child. Fuller stated that Landy
    “ran up” on him, saying, “I’m f***ing [Fludd] now. I’m her stepdad.
    That’s my daughter,” after which Fuller “got mad.”           When an
    investigator asked Fuller if he “got mad and blacked out,” he replied,
    “Nah, man.” Fuller admitted to shooting Landy, but claimed he did
    so in self-defense. He admitted that, when he brandished the gun,
    Landy started running and Fuller shot as Landy fled.          He also
    recalled that the gun jammed and that he had to clear it in order to
    fire it again.
    Investigators left Fuller alone in the interview room and,
    during this time, Fuller started talking to himself.         He made
    statements such as: “That man running up on me . . . I ain’t no b***h,
    man that man knew what he was doing. Thought he was gonna
    5
    whoop my a** and I be crippled[2] and I ain’t gonna do s**t. I ain’t
    gonna stand out there and get my a** whooped.” Investigators
    returned a few minutes later and served Fuller with an arrest
    warrant for murder. Fuller asked, “Murder?” and investigators left
    the room again. Fuller began speaking to himself again, stating
    things such as: “That n****r dead?”; “Man, I f***ed up”; and, “That
    n****r run up on me trying to fight me and I go to f***ing jail.” After
    the interview, the police searched Fuller’s home and recovered a
    Springfield 9mm handgun.
    2.    Fuller alleges that he received ineffective assistance of
    trial counsel based upon counsel’s failure to: (a) object to Fludd’s
    testimony that Fuller had sent her a threatening message on social
    media on the ground that her testimony violated OCGA § 24-10-
    10023 (“the best evidence rule”); (b) request that the pattern charge
    2  At the time of the shooting, Fuller was using a walker as he was
    recovering from a recent gunshot wound to the leg he incurred in an unrelated
    matter.
    3 OCGA § 24-10-1002 provides as follows: “To prove the contents of a
    writing, recording, or photograph, the original writing, recording, or
    photograph shall be required.”
    6
    for voluntary manslaughter be modified to fit the evidence presented
    at trial; and (c) argue to the jury that Landy’s taunts were sufficient
    to support a finding that Fuller acted as a result of an irresistible
    passion. In order to establish constitutionally ineffective assistance,
    a defendant must show that his 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. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
    ,
    694 (III) (B) (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984). If the defendant
    fails to satisfy either prong of the Strickland test, this Court is not
    required to examine the other. See Green v. State, 
    291 Ga. 579
    , 580
    (2) (
    731 SE2d 359
    ) (2012).
    To prove deficiency, Fuller must show that his attorney
    “performed at trial in an objectively unreasonable way considering
    all the circumstances and in the light of prevailing professional
    norms.” Romer v. State, 
    293 Ga. 339
    , 344 (3) (
    745 SE2d 637
    ) (2013).
    In order to do so, Fuller must “overcome the strong presumption that
    counsel’s performance fell within a wide range of reasonable
    7
    professional conduct.” Marshall v. State, 
    297 Ga. 445
    , 448 (2) (
    774 SE2d 675
    ) (2015) (citation and punctuation omitted). “This burden,
    although not impossible to carry, is a heavy one.” Harrison v. State,
    
    309 Ga. 747
    , 749-750 (2) (
    848 SE2d 84
    ) (2020). “In reviewing the
    trial court’s decision, we accept the trial court’s factual findings and
    credibility determinations unless clearly erroneous, but we
    independently apply the legal principles to the facts.” Wright v.
    State, 
    291 Ga. 869
    , 870 (2) (
    734 SE2d 876
    ) (2012) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). Viewing the claims in this light, we conclude
    that Fuller has failed to show constitutional deficiency on the part
    of his trial counsel.
    (a) Best Evidence Objection
    Fludd testified at trial that, prior to their child’s first birthday
    party, Fuller sent her a direct message on social media that he was
    going to kill her and Landy and “take my child.” Trial counsel did
    not object to this testimony at trial. 4 Fuller argues that trial counsel
    4 Prior to trial, the State filed a motion to introduce “evidence identifying
    prior difficulties and threats made by the defendant that the State contends
    8
    was ineffective for failing to object to this testimony pursuant to the
    best evidence rule. We disagree.
    At the motion for new trial hearing, Fuller questioned trial
    counsel as to why he did not object to Fludd’s testimony under the
    best evidence rule. Trial counsel testified that his theory was to
    “attack[] the police work in the case, and part of that argument was
    the fact that they had the ability, perhaps, to download this message
    from Messenger or get a copy, and that had not been presented to
    the jury.” Fuller also asked trial counsel why he did not lodge a best
    evidence objection to the threat at the pretrial hearing.               Trial
    counsel testified that he did not object on that basis because he did
    not believe the rule applied, explaining that “[t]he contents of the
    writing, nothing was being proved, . . . a witness can testify to things
    that there may be a writing to corroborate it, but it doesn’t require
    are intrinsic to the charged offenses.” At a hearing on the motion, the State
    made a proffer to the trial court concerning the threatening message. Trial
    counsel objected to the admission of the threat at this time, arguing that the
    court needed to hear more evidence and facts before it could make a ruling on
    the admission of that evidence. The trial court disagreed and subsequently
    admitted the evidence via written order.
    9
    the writing to come in for the witness to testify to it.”
    In denying the motion for new trial, the court credited trial
    counsel’s testimony, finding that counsel strategically “capitalized
    on the State’s failure to present the actual . . . messages between the
    Defendant and Fludd during his closing argument to highlight the
    lack of a proper police investigation of the case.” Here, trial counsel
    articulated a reasonable strategy to emphasize the missing message
    in order to attack the State’s case. It is well settled that “[t]rial
    tactics and strategy . . . are almost never adequate grounds for
    finding trial counsel ineffective unless they are so patently
    unreasonable that no competent attorney would have chosen them.”
    McNair v. State, 
    296 Ga. 181
    , 184 (2) (b) (
    766 SE2d 45
    ) (2014)
    (citation and punctuation omitted.)       Fuller has not carried his
    burden to show that no competent attorney would have chosen this
    strategy.. (Indeed, the record shows that, during closing argument,
    trial counsel emphasized the missing message to the jury in support
    of his broader argument attacking Fludd’s credibility and the
    sufficiency of the State’s investigation into the case. Consequently,
    10
    we cannot say that by failing to raise a best evidence objection,
    counsel was pursuing an unreasonable strategy.         Cf. Holmes v.
    State, 
    293 Ga. 229
    , 233 (3) (b) (
    744 SE2d 701
    ) (2013) (trial counsel
    not deficient in decision not to object to hearsay because he believed
    that testimony supported appellant’s defense). See also Harrison,
    309 Ga. at 752 (2) (a) (explaining that not objecting to testimony “can
    be part of a reasonable trial strategy calculated to cast doubt on the
    State’s belief in an unreliable witness”). Fuller therefore has failed
    to show deficient performance under Strickland.
    (b) Voluntary Manslaughter Jury Instruction
    Fuller contends that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to
    request that the pattern jury charge on voluntary manslaughter be
    modified to include the following phrase: “Similarly, words which
    are connected to, or describe, the provocative conduct by the victim
    may, in some instances, be sufficient provocation to excite a sudden,
    violent, and irresistible passion in a reasonable person.” Fuller
    argues that this additional verbiage would have been supported by
    the evidence and would have provided the jury an additional avenue
    11
    to consider voluntary manslaughter over murder. We disagree.
    At trial, the court read the jury the pattern instruction on
    voluntary manslaughter, which read, in relevant part, as follows:
    Provocation by words alon[e] will, in no case, justify such
    excitement or passion sufficient to free the accused from
    the crime of murder or to reduce the offense to
    manslaughter when the killing is done solely in
    resentment of such provoking words. Words accompanied
    by menaces, though the menaces do not amount to an
    actual assault, may, in some instances, be sufficient
    provocation to excite a sudden, violent, and irresistible
    passion in a reasonable person. And if a person acts from
    such passion and not from malice or any spirit of revenge,
    then it would constitute – then such would constitute
    voluntary manslaughter.
    During closing argument, trial counsel relied upon the voluntary
    manslaughter charge to argue that where words are “menaces and
    do not amount to an actual assault, then in some cases words may
    be enough. It’s sufficient if it causes provocation and excites a
    sudden, violent, and irresistible passion in a reasonable person. . . .
    then words can be enough under the voluntary manslaughter
    instruction.” Trial counsel then emphasized Stevens’ testimony that
    Landy was provoking Fuller prior to the shooting, that Landy
    12
    taunted Fuller about taking care of Fuller’s child and sleeping with
    Fludd, argued that those provocations were done intentionally “to
    push [Fuller]’s buttons that night,” and argued that the taunts were
    sufficient provocation to mitigate Fuller’s actions to voluntary
    manslaughter.
    At the motion for new trial hearing, when asked about the
    potential to modify the “provocation by words alone” charge, trial
    counsel testified that he was “very comfortable with the standard
    instruction” because the “instruction provided me with sufficient
    law to argue the point that I wanted to argue” concerning voluntary
    manslaughter. The trial court credited trial counsel’s testimony and
    found “that [counsel’s] tactical decision to make his argument to the
    jury based on the pattern charge was reasonable and therefore that
    his performance in that regard was not deficient.” See Jones v.
    State, 
    287 Ga. 270
    , 272 (
    695 SE2d 271
    ) (2010) (“The trial court was
    authorized to credit the testimony of [appellant’s trial] counsel, and
    its factual findings and credibility determinations will be accepted
    unless clearly erroneous.”).
    13
    We agree with the trial court that Fuller has failed to show that
    trial counsel was constitutionally deficient for failing to request that
    language be added to the pattern jury charge at issue. “Under
    Strickland, decisions on requests to charge involve trial tactics to
    which we must afford substantial latitude, and they provide no
    grounds for reversal unless such tactical decisions are so patently
    unreasonable that no competent attorney would have chosen them.”
    Pennie v. State, 
    292 Ga. 249
    , 252 (2) (
    736 SE2d 433
    ) (2013) (citation
    and punctuation omitted). Here, we cannot say that Fuller has met
    this burden.   Trial counsel articulated a reasonable strategy in
    utilizing the pattern charge. Further, the record shows that counsel
    in fact emphasized portions of the charge to argue to the jury that
    Landy’s menacing words were sufficient provocation to mitigate
    Fuller’s actions to voluntary manslaughter rather than malice
    murder. Because trial counsel’s “decisions regarding trial tactics
    and strategy” were not “so patently unreasonable that no competent
    attorney would have followed such a course,” Davis v. State, 
    299 Ga. 180
    , 183 (
    787 SE2d 221
    ) (2016) (citation and punctuation omitted),
    14
    Fuller has failed to show that trial counsel was deficient by not
    requesting that the jury charge at issue be modified.
    (c) Closing Argument
    Fuller alleges that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to
    argue to the jury that Landy’s taunts were sufficient to create an
    irresistible passion and support a finding of voluntary manslaughter
    rather than malice murder. However, as shown above, trial counsel
    did make this argument to the jury. Consequently, Fuller has failed
    to show deficient performance under Strickland on this claim.
    3. Finally, Fuller argues that the cumulative effect of counsel’s
    alleged errors prejudiced the outcome of his trial. “When reviewing
    such a claim, we evaluate only the effects of matters determined to
    be error, not the cumulative effect of non-errors.” Cox v. State, 
    306 Ga. 736
    , 743 (2) (e) (
    832 SE2d 354
    ) (2019) (citation and punctuation
    omitted). Here, Fuller has failed to show deficiency on any of his
    allegations of ineffective assistance; therefore, his cumulative effect
    assertion has no merit. See 
    id.
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    15