Young v. State ( 2023 )


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  • 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
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    official text of the opinion.
    In the Supreme Court of Georgia
    Decided: August 21, 2023
    S23A0518. YOUNG v. THE STATE.
    MCMILLIAN, Justice.
    In May 2021, a jury found Tomarkus Mikhail Young guilty of
    felony murder and other charges in connection with the shooting
    death of Richard Anderson. 1 On appeal, Young asserts that the
    evidence was constitutionally insufficient to support his convictions;
    that the trial court erred in denying his motion to strike a potential
    1 Anderson was killed on or about February 25, 2018. On February 4,
    2019, a Wilkes County grand jury indicted Young for felony murder predicated
    on aggravated assault (Count 1), aggravated assault (Count 2), voluntary
    manslaughter (Count 3), and possession of a firearm during the commission of
    a felony (Count 4). At a trial held from May 3 to 7, 2021, a jury found Young
    guilty on Counts 1, 2, and 4 but not guilty on Count 3. On May 13, 2021, the
    trial court sentenced Young to serve life in prison with the possibility of parole
    on Count 1 and five years in prison on Count 4 to be served consecutively;
    Count 2 was merged with Count 1 for sentencing purposes. Young timely filed
    a motion for new trial, which was later amended through new counsel on
    October 19, 2022, and December 20, 2022. Following a hearing, the trial court
    denied the amended motion on December 29, 2022. Young timely appealed,
    and his case was docketed to the April 2023 term of this Court and submitted
    for a decision on the briefs.
    juror; that he received ineffective assistance of counsel; and that
    cumulative errors require the grant of a new trial. For the reasons
    that follow, we conclude these assertions lack merit and affirm.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, the
    evidence at trial showed that on February 23, 2018, Anderson
    purchased a .40-caliber handgun, which he showed to several people
    gathered at a barbershop. When Young saw the handgun, he offered
    to purchase it. Anderson told him it was not for sale but that he had
    another gun he could sell. Two days later, a group of people were
    gathered outside at a local “bootlegger’s” house in Wilkes County.
    Young shot dice and drank alcohol with his friends near the gated
    entrance to the house. At one point, Anderson pulled up in his car
    and approached the group, looking to purchase marijuana. Anderson
    also told the group that he had a handgun to sell. He showed them
    the handgun after demonstrating that it was not loaded. Anderson
    and Young then got into Anderson’s car together, but after Young
    exited the vehicle followed by Anderson, Young, who was wearing a
    hoodie with a front pocket, pulled out a handgun from either his
    2
    pocket or waistband area and shot and killed Anderson.
    After Anderson’s death, Young’s friend, Kijuan Vance, agreed
    to speak with GBI Special Agent Austin Bradshaw and stated that
    on the night of the shooting he was among the group of people
    gathered outside the bootlegger’s house, where he saw Young sitting
    with Anderson in Anderson’s car. Young then got out of the car and
    announced that he was taking Anderson’s gun. Anderson followed
    after Young, and it appeared to Vance that Anderson, who was
    unarmed, was trying to get his gun back from Young. Young pulled
    something out of his pocket and pointed it at Anderson. Vance said
    he looked away because he “knew what was about to happen,” heard
    a gunshot, and turned back to see Anderson on the ground. Everyone
    gathered there, including Vance, immediately ran or drove away
    after hearing the gunshot. When Vance mentioned to the agent that
    he and Young had spoken shortly before the shooting that evening,
    Agent Bradshaw asked Vance to take a photograph of his phone’s
    call log. Vance agreed, and Agent Bradshaw was able to determine
    that Vance’s phone had been in contact with someone saved as
    3
    “Thrax” several times during the evening of the shooting. 2
    Raiquan Davis, another of Young’s friends who was present on
    the night of the shooting, testified that he saw Young shoot
    Anderson in the chest while Anderson was unarmed. It looked to
    him that Anderson was trying to get his gun back from Young, who
    was also holding his own gun. Davis admitted that he initially lied
    to GBI agents several times to protect Young but decided to testify
    because it was “the right f**king thing to do.” Terrance Zellars, who
    was dating Young’s sister at the time, testified that the morning
    after the shooting, Young told him that he “went to the spot last
    night and sh** went south” and “I’m not playing with anybody
    anymore, if they roll they’re fixing to get it.” Zellars saw that Young
    had a handgun with him at that time.
    Officers who responded to the scene found Anderson lying on
    the street, deceased from an apparent gunshot wound. GBI Special
    2 At trial, Vance claimed that he had no memory of the shooting or of
    speaking with law enforcement officers about what he had witnessed.
    However, a recording of his interview with Agent Bradshaw was played for the
    jury.
    4
    Agent Carl Murray was called to assist with processing the crime
    scene and recovered a gold cell phone about 30 feet from Anderson’s
    body. He also recovered an empty gun holster, an empty Kahr
    Firearms box, .40-caliber ammunition, and a black cell phone from
    inside Anderson’s car. Although the gold cell phone was locked,
    officers were able to identify its number and link that phone number
    to Young. After Anderson’s girlfriend shared Anderson’s password,
    officers were able to unlock the black cell phone found in his car and
    identified Young’s cell phone number in his contacts under the name
    “Trax.”
    Officers arrived at Young’s residence the following morning.
    Young agreed to speak with officers after being advised of his rights
    under Miranda, 3 and a recording of this interview was played for the
    jury. Young admitted seeing Anderson at a barbershop a few days
    before, but denied talking about a gun and denied being at the
    bootlegger’s house on the night of the shooting.
    3 See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (86 SCt 1602, 16 LE2d 694)
    (1966).
    5
    During a search of Young’s house, officers recovered a 9mm
    Glock pistol in a chair on the front porch, as well as a .380 Lorcin
    pistol and a box of .380-caliber full-metal jacket ammunition from
    the bedroom belonging to Young’s mother. During a second search
    of Young’s home, officers recovered a sweat shirt with a hoodie and
    a front pocket and sweat pants in Young’s room that was similar to
    what a witness had described Young wearing on the night of the
    shooting.
    The owner of a pawn shop in nearby Thomson, Georgia
    testified that he sold Anderson a Kahr CT .40-caliber handgun on
    February 23, 2018, and a Hi Point .45-caliber handgun on March 22,
    2017. Neither gun was ever recovered. After testing, a GBI firearms
    examiner was only able to determine that the bullet recovered from
    Anderson’s autopsy was a .380-caliber full-metal jacket bullet and
    that it was not consistent with having been fired from either gun
    recovered from Young’s home. The medical examiner who performed
    the autopsy testified that Anderson died from a single gunshot
    wound to the right side of his chest. There was no evidence of
    6
    stippling, indicating that Anderson had been shot from a distance of
    greater than three feet.
    1. Young contends that the evidence was insufficient as a
    matter of constitutional due process to support his convictions
    because the State’s evidence was speculative and many of the
    witnesses admitted to lying to investigators.
    When this Court evaluates the sufficiency of the evidence, “the
    relevant question is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (III) (B) (99 SCt 2781,
    61 LE2d 560) (1979) (emphasis omitted). So viewed, we conclude
    that the evidence was constitutionally sufficient to support Young’s
    convictions for felony murder and possession of a firearm during the
    commission of a felony.
    Multiple witnesses testified that Young was at the scene on the
    night of the shooting. Several witnesses testified that Young had
    previously approached Anderson about purchasing his handgun and
    7
    that Anderson declined. One eyewitness told officers that Young
    pointed   a   weapon     at   Anderson,    who    appeared     unarmed,
    immediately before he heard a gunshot and ran. A second
    eyewitness testified that he saw Young shoot Anderson. Young
    abandoned his cell phone at the scene, made incriminating
    statements the following morning, and lied to officers about being at
    the scene of the shooting.
    Even though Young points to inconsistencies in the witnesses’
    testimony to argue that the evidence was insufficient, it is well
    established that any conflicts in the evidence were for the jury to
    resolve. See McIntyre v. State, 
    312 Ga. 531
    , 531 (1) (
    863 SE2d 166
    )
    (2021) (“This Court does not reweigh evidence or resolve conflicts in
    testimony; instead evidence is reviewed in a light most favorable to
    the verdict, with deference to the jury’s assessment of the weight
    and credibility of the evidence.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
    Accordingly, this enumeration of error fails. 4
    4 To the extent that Young argues that the trial court should have
    granted a new trial on the general grounds, see OCGA §§ 5-5-20 and 5-5-21,
    8
    2. Young also argues that the trial court should have excluded
    Juror No. 22, a potential juror who was employed at the Wilkes
    County jail, for cause. “Striking a juror for cause is a matter
    committed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and no error will
    be found absent a showing that the discretion was manifestly
    abused.” Stephens v. State, 
    309 Ga. 447
    , 451 (2) (
    847 SE2d 139
    )
    (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    The record shows that during the first morning of voir dire, the
    entirety of which was not transcribed, the trial court questioned
    Juror No. 22, who responded that she worked in the Wilkes County
    jail, where Young had been housed waiting for trial, but that she
    was not a POST-certified officer with arrest powers. Young’s counsel
    argued that “she’s aware of my client’s custody position” and some
    other charges in relation to a fight in the jail, which counsel thought
    “would be very prejudicial,” meaning that she should be struck for
    this argument “is not properly addressed to this Court as such a decision is one
    that is solely within the discretion of the trial court.” Lewis v. State, 
    314 Ga. 654
    , 660 (2) n.5 (
    878 SE2d 467
    ) (2022) (citation and punctuation omitted). And,
    as it is clear from the record that the trial court applied the correct standard,
    it did not abuse its discretion.
    9
    cause. The trial court explained that it would keep Juror No. 22 “in
    the panel for right now,” but noted that if defense counsel found
    authority for his argument that she should be struck for cause, the
    court would address the argument again.
    Although not transcribed, it appears that during the parties’
    subsequent jury selection at the end of the day, Young struck Juror
    No. 22 with one of his nine peremptory strikes. Then, after the jury
    had been chosen, but prior to the jury being impaneled, Young
    moved for a mistrial based on his having to use a peremptory strike
    on Juror No. 22. The trial court granted Young until the following
    morning to identify any relevant authority to support the motion for
    mistrial. The next morning, Young renewed his motion for mistrial
    and offered a 2003 Court of Appeals case holding that it was error
    to allow a jailer to serve as a juror. 5 After the State argued in
    response that this Court’s holding in Willis v. State, 
    304 Ga. 686
     (820
    5 See Kier v. State, 
    263 Ga. App. 347
    , 348-49 (1) (
    587 SE2d 841
    ) (2003)
    (recognizing that corrections officers are not subject to automatic removal for
    cause but reversing conviction for including in the panel of potential jurors a
    jailer who was employed at the jail where the defendant was incarcerated),
    overruled in part by Willis v. State, 
    304 Ga. 686
     (
    820 SE2d 640
    ) (2018).
    
    10 SE2d 640
    ) (2018), changed the way for-cause challenges are
    analyzed and that Young cured any problem by using a peremptory
    strike to strike Juror No. 22, the trial court denied Young’s motion.
    The State now argues that, because Young did not obtain a
    ruling on his motion to strike Juror No. 22 before the jury was
    empaneled, this enumeration was not preserved for appellate
    review. See Kennebrew v. State, 
    304 Ga. 406
    , 408 n.2 (
    819 SE2d 37
    )
    (2018) (“[L]egal issues must be raised and ruled on below in order to
    be properly considered on appeal.”). However, pretermitting
    whether this issue was preserved for ordinary appellate review and
    pretermitting whether the trial court erred in denying a challenge
    for cause, Young cannot show harm under our holding in Willis. In
    that case, we relied on the United States Supreme Court’s holding
    that “peremptory challenges to prospective jurors are not of
    constitutional dimension” and are instead “one means to achieve the
    constitutionally required end of an impartial jury” to conclude that
    the erroneous denial of a motion to excuse a prospective juror is
    harmless where the juror is subsequently removed by the use of a
    11
    peremptory strike. Willis, 304 Ga. at 704 (11) (a) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). Thus, to prevail on a claim that a challenged
    juror should have been removed for cause, an appellant must show
    harm, which, in this context, requires an appellant to demonstrate
    that a challenged juror who served on the jury was unqualified. See
    Jackson v. State, 
    314 Ga. 751
    , 758 (2) (
    879 SE2d 410
    ) (2022).
    Here, it is undisputed that Juror No. 22 did not sit on the jury,
    and Young has made no argument that any of the jurors who
    ultimately served on the jury were ever challenged or were
    otherwise unqualified. Because Young obtained the relief that he
    requested with respect to Juror No. 22 not being seated on the jury
    he cannot demonstrate the requisite harm, and his claim fails. See
    Stephens, 309 Ga. at 451 (2) (An “erroneous [ruling on] a challenge
    for cause affords no ground of complaint if a competent and unbiased
    jury is finally selected.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).
    3. Young next argues that he received constitutionally
    ineffective assistance of counsel in several respects. We are not
    persuaded.
    12
    To succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,
    Young must show both that his counsel’s performance was deficient
    and that such deficiency prejudiced his defense. See Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (III) (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674)
    (1984). To satisfy the deficiency prong, Young must demonstrate
    that his counsel “performed at trial in an objectively unreasonable
    way considering all the circumstances and in the light of prevailing
    professional norms.” Bacon v. State, 
    316 Ga. 234
    , 239 (3) (
    887 SE2d 263
    ) (2023) (citation and punctuation omitted). In doing so, Young
    must overcome “[a] strong presumption . . . that trial counsel’s
    performance was reasonable and that counsel’s decisions and
    choices at trial fell within the broad range of professional conduct as
    assessed from counsel’s perspective at the time of trial and under
    the specific circumstances of the case.” 
    Id.
     (citation and punctuation
    omitted). To establish prejudice, Young “must prove that there is a
    reasonable probability that, but for his trial counsel’s deficiency, the
    result of the trial would have been different.” Bates v. State, 
    313 Ga. 57
    , 62 (2) (
    867 SE2d 140
    ) (2022). In reviewing a trial court’s ruling
    13
    on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, “we accept the trial
    court’s factual findings and credibility determinations unless clearly
    erroneous, but we independently apply the legal principles to the
    facts.” Fuller v. State, 
    316 Ga. 127
    , 130 (2) (
    886 SE2d 798
    ) (2023)
    (citation and punctuation omitted). If Young fails to satisfy either
    prong of the Strickland test, “this Court is not required to examine
    the other.” Bacon, 316 Ga. at 240 (3).
    (a) Young first asserts that trial counsel failed to properly
    prepare for or support his motion to strike Juror No. 22 for cause,
    which he claims would have been granted, thereby avoiding the use
    of a peremptory strike. However, as stated in Division 2, Young has
    not shown that any juror sworn to hear his case was not a legal and
    impartial juror. Therefore, pretermitting any deficiency in counsel’s
    performance, Young cannot show that any prejudice resulted from
    his counsel’s unsuccessful motion to strike. See Williams v. State,
    
    305 Ga. 776
    , 780 (2) (b) (
    827 SE2d 849
    ) (2019) (because nothing in
    the record shows that any juror who ultimately served was not a
    legal and impartial juror, appellant cannot show that any prejudice
    14
    resulted from counsel’s failure to object to the State’s motion to
    strike a prospective juror for cause).
    (b) Young next argues that his trial counsel “seemed wholly
    unprepared for and unfamiliar with the Georgia Rules of Evidence
    and the Evidence Code in general” and that counsel also displayed
    “an argumentative and combative attitude toward witnesses and the
    Court which wholly prejudiced Young’s case.”
    At the motion for new trial hearing, Young’s trial counsel
    testified that he has been licensed to practice law in Georgia since
    1974 and estimated that he has tried approximately 800 jury trials,
    most of them felony cases. In this case, in addition to reviewing the
    police reports, counsel spoke with Young, Young’s brother, the
    owner of the house near the crime scene, and other witnesses who
    claimed to be present at the time of the shooting. Although he met
    with Young 15 to 20 times prior to trial, the conversations were “not
    productive,” as Young never told him what happened on the night of
    the shooting. Counsel explained that, although his tactics and
    demeanor may seem “offensive” to some, it is “how I get not guilty
    15
    verdicts.”
    Young also testified at the motion for new trial hearing and
    admitted that counsel visited him “about ten times” and that counsel
    went over the witness statements and discovery with him. In
    denying the motion for new trial, the trial court found Young’s
    testimony to be not credible and counsel’s testimony to be credible.
    The trial court also found that trial counsel appeared to be well
    versed in the rules of evidence – as demonstrated by numerous
    successful objections – and the rules of professional conduct and that
    Young had failed to point to “any instances that could not reasonably
    be interpreted as either trial tactics or strategy.”
    Although Young argues on appeal that “[c]ountless times,
    [counsel] contradicted himself, spoke over witnesses, and drew the
    ire of both the Office of the District Attorney and of the Court,” he
    provides no citations to the record and offers very little context to
    support these arguments. The only example Young offers with any
    detail is his counsel’s cross-examination of Davis. Young argues
    that, had counsel been prepared, he would have provided a certified
    16
    copy of Davis’s prior conviction. However, Young has presented no
    evidence that Davis had a prior conviction, and this Court cannot
    conclude that Young’s trial counsel was deficient in failing to present
    evidence that has not been shown to even exist. See Thorpe v. State,
    
    304 Ga. 266
    , 268 (2) (
    818 SE2d 547
    ) (2018) (“[Appellant] did not . . .
    introduce any of [witness’s] alleged prior convictions into evidence
    at the motion for new trial hearing, and it was his burden to show
    deficient performance and prejudice through competent evidence,
    for a silent or ambiguous record is not sufficient to overcome the
    strong presumption of reasonable performance.” (citation and
    punctuation omitted)). Thus, Young has failed to meet his burden of
    showing that his trial counsel performed deficiently in this regard,
    and his claim of ineffective assistance on this ground fails.
    (c) Young next asserts that trial counsel failed to timely request
    that his motion to suppress cell phone evidence be placed on the trial
    court’s calendar for a hearing. Young, however, provides no citation
    to the record in support of this claim, and it does not appear that a
    particularized motion to suppress cell phone evidence was ever filed
    17
    in this case. Because counsel cannot be deficient for failing to
    request a timely hearing on a non-existent motion, Young has “failed
    to show that counsel’s performance was deficient in this respect,
    [and] has not carried his burden of demonstrating that his trial
    counsel was constitutionally ineffective.” Williams v. State, 
    315 Ga. 797
    , 806 (2) (
    884 SE2d 877
    ) (2023). Cf. Allen v. State, 
    348 Ga. App. 595
    , 602-603 (1) (c) (
    824 SE2d 50
    ) (“[A]bsent an unequivocal request
    to represent himself, the trial court did not err in failing to conduct
    a Faretta hearing, and thus trial counsel was not deficient for failing
    to request such.”).
    We note further that on appeal, Young makes no specific
    argument to support why any cell phone evidence in this case was
    subject to suppression, so he fails to show that any such motion
    would have been successful even if filed. See Roseboro v. State, 
    308 Ga. 428
    , 435 (2) (a) (
    841 SE2d 706
    ) (2020) (“[B]ecause [the appellant]
    has not made a showing that had a motion been filed, the evidence
    would have been suppressed, . . . trial counsel was not deficient.”).
    Indeed, the record shows that Young’s cell phone, which was
    18
    abandoned at the scene, was never searched by the police, and
    Young lacked standing to suppress evidence from Anderson’s cell
    phone. See, e.g., Stinski v. State, 
    281 Ga. 783
    , 783-784 (1) (
    642 SE2d 1
    ) (2007).
    (d) Young also argues that his counsel was unable to hear and
    understand the trial proceedings and would “just lean on Young to
    interpret for him what was going on” because he was “confused” and
    “couldn’t keep the details straight.” Again, Young provides no
    citations to the record to support this assertion. The only example
    he offered at the motion for new trial hearing was: “Like when the
    DA was talking to the witnesses and stuff like that he would ask me,
    like, what they say, what she say, I mean, and stuff like that.” In
    ruling on this claim, the trial court noted that Young’s testimony at
    the motion for new trial hearing on this point was not credible; that
    Young admitted his counsel was “mentally clear” about the case and
    “knew everything”; and that trial counsel credibly denied suffering
    from any hearing loss or lack of clarity during the trial.
    Young has failed to show that the trial court’s factual and
    19
    credibility findings in this regard were clearly erroneous. See Davis
    v. State, 
    306 Ga. 430
    , 432 (
    831 SE2d 804
    ) (2019) (“The trial court
    was authorized to credit the testimony of the defendant’s counsel,
    and its factual findings and credibility determinations will be
    accepted unless clearly erroneous.” (citation and punctuation
    omitted)).       Young has therefore “failed to defeat the strong
    presumption of counsel’s reasonable professional assistance,” Jones
    v. State, 
    296 Ga. 561
    , 567 (4) (
    769 SE2d 307
    ) (2015), and thus has
    not met his burden of showing that his trial counsel was
    constitutionally deficient in this regard, so this ineffectiveness claim
    fails as well.
    4. Young asserts that cumulative effect of the errors and
    deficiencies in his case denied him a fundamentally fair trial. We
    reject this assertion.
    “When considering the cumulative effect of presumed errors by
    trial counsel and the trial court, this Court considers collectively the
    prejudicial effect, if any, of trial court errors, along with the
    prejudice caused by any deficient performance of counsel.” Huff v.
    20
    State, 
    315 Ga. 558
    , 568 (6) (
    883 SE2d 773
    ) (2023) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). Even assuming that any error in seating
    Juror No. 22 is the kind of error that we can aggregate with
    evidentiary errors (which we have not identified here) or trial-
    counsel deficiencies (one of which we have presumed), Young has not
    provided any argument or otherwise “demonstrated a reasonable
    probability that, but for these [alleged] failures, the outcome of the
    proceeding would have been different.” Payne v. State, 
    314 Ga. 322
    ,
    334 (4) (
    877 SE2d 202
    ) (2022) (cumulative effect of a presumed clear
    error by the trial court not giving an accomplice corroboration
    charge, a presumed deficiency by trial counsel for not requesting
    that charge, and a presumed deficiency by trial counsel for not
    objecting to hearsay was insufficient to establish cumulative error);
    see also State v. Lane, 
    308 Ga. 10
    , 18 (1) (
    838 SE2d 808
    ) (2020) (“[A]
    defendant who wishes to take advantage of the [cumulative error
    rule] should explain to the reviewing court just how he was
    prejudiced by the cumulative effect of multiple errors.”).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    21