Chambliss 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: December 19, 2023
    S23A0802. CHAMBLISS v. THE STATE.
    PINSON, Justice.
    Raymond Chambliss got into an argument at his home with his
    girlfriend, Tonia Herring. During the argument, Herring hit
    Chambliss with an umbrella, and, in response, he retrieved a gun,
    followed her outside, and ultimately shot and killed her. He was con-
    victed of felony murder.1 On appeal, Chambliss raises a number of
    1 The shooting occurred in the early hours of August 3, 2018. On Novem-
    ber 12, 2020, a Monroe County grand jury returned an indictment charging
    Chambliss with malice murder of Herring (Count 1), felony murder of Herring
    predicated on the aggravated assault of shooting her (Count 2), felony murder
    of Herring predicated on the aggravated assault of striking her with a handgun
    (Count 3), and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, to
    wit, murder (Count 4). After a jury trial from March 22 to 24, 2021, Chambliss
    was found guilty of Count 2 only. On March 24, 2021, the trial court sentenced
    him to life. Chambliss, through trial counsel, filed a timely motion for new trial
    on April 16, 2021, and twice amended it through new counsel. After a hearing,
    the trial court denied the motion on March 15, 2023. Chambliss filed a timely
    notice of appeal the same day. His case was docketed to the August 2023 term
    of this Court and submitted for a decision on the briefs.
    claims. He contends that the evidence was not sufficient to support
    his convictions as a matter of constitutional due process. He claims
    three instructional errors: giving an incorrect charge for simple as-
    sault and failing to charge two lesser offenses (misdemeanor invol-
    untary manslaughter premised on reckless conduct, simple battery,
    or battery as a lesser offense of felony murder, and felony involun-
    tary manslaughter based on reckless conduct). And he contends that
    trial counsel was ineffective for failing to request charges for the
    same two lesser offenses.
    Each claim fails. The evidence was sufficient to support the fel-
    ony murder conviction as a matter of constitutional due process. As
    for the claims of instructional error, Chambliss concedes that each
    is reviewable only for plain error. He has not shown that the given
    instruction on simple assault contained any obvious legal error and
    has not established that the trial court obviously erred by failing to
    charge the lesser offenses of felony or misdemeanor involuntary
    manslaughter. And finally, for that same reason, his claims of inef-
    fective assistance fail: he has not established that counsel performed
    2
    deficiently by failing to request charges on lesser offenses that were
    not available to him. So we affirm his conviction.
    1. Evidence Presented at Trial
    The evidence at trial showed the following. Chambliss and Her-
    ring met and began a romantic relationship five or six months before
    her death in August 2018. On the evening of August 2, 2018,
    Chambliss called at least two neighbors looking for Herring, and he
    told one of them that he did not want Herring to return to his home
    that night. According to Chambliss, who testified at trial, Herring
    had been at his home earlier in the day and he had asked her to
    leave because she drank too much alcohol. But after he discovered a
    pill bottle that contained marijuana was missing from his home and
    suspected that Herring had taken it, he called Herring and she
    agreed to come back to the home.
    A neighbor was at Chambliss’s home when Herring arrived.
    This neighbor had heard Chambliss and Herring arguing over the
    phone earlier that evening, and the two continued their argument
    3
    after Herring arrived at the home. During the argument, the neigh-
    bor saw Herring hit Chambliss with an umbrella, and the neighbor
    left soon after.
    Chambliss testified that after Herring hit him with the um-
    brella, he got his gun, loaded it, and told Herring to leave. Herring
    went outside, and Chambliss followed her with the gun, shot at the
    ground, and told her to leave his yard. Then, according to Chambliss,
    Herring started “coming at him with the umbrella” again, so he hit
    her in the head with the loaded gun to protect himself from the um-
    brella, and the gun went off.
    Chambliss’s neighbor heard gunshots and ran outside, and
    Chambliss asked the neighbor to call 911. As she made the call, the
    neighbor walked toward Chambliss’s house, where she saw him
    holding Herring’s body and telling her to get up.
    When officers arrived, Chambliss was still cradling Herring
    and telling her to wake up, but Herring was dead. Chambliss told
    both officers that he hit Herring with a gun and it went off. Officers
    collected evidence at the scene, including a handgun that was found
    4
    on a sofa in Chambliss’s living room.
    The medical examiner who performed Herring’s autopsy deter-
    mined that a bullet entered Herring’s face and traveled into her
    brainstem, and that the injury to the brainstem was fatal. Based on
    the soot and stippling around Herring’s gunshot wound, the medical
    examiner determined that the gun was fired six to twelve inches
    away from Herring’s face. The medical examiner explained that this
    was an approximation, and it was possible that the gun could have
    been closer than six inches. But the medical examiner ruled out that
    Herring had suffered a “contact wound,” i.e., a wound that forms
    when the muzzle of the firearm is in contact with the skin when the
    firearm is discharged, due to the absence of searing or burning near
    the entrance wound.
    A GBI firearms examiner determined that the bullet recovered
    from Herring’s body was fired from the gun collected from
    Chambliss’s living room. The firearms examiner found no problem
    with the safety or during the test-fire of the weapon. The firearms
    examiner also conducted an “abuse test,” which is used to determine
    5
    whether certain actions will cause a firearm to discharge acci-
    dentally, and identified one “abuse failure” with the gun: When the
    gun was dropped on its butt from a height of four feet with the safety
    off, the gun discharged immediately.
    2. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Chambliss contends that the evidence was not sufficient to sup-
    port his felony murder conviction as a matter of constitutional due
    process. When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the
    evidence presented in the light most favorable to the verdicts to de-
    termine whether a rational trier of fact could have found the defend-
    ant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (III) (B) (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). In doing
    so, we do not “weigh the evidence on appeal or resolve conflicts in
    trial testimony,” Byers v. State, 
    311 Ga. 259
    , 266 (2) (
    857 SE2d 447
    )
    (2021) (citation and punctuation omitted), but instead defer “to the
    jury’s assessment of the weight and credibility of the evidence.”
    Jones v. State, 
    314 Ga. 692
    , 695 (
    878 SE2d 502
    ) (2022) (citation and
    punctuation omitted).
    6
    Viewed in that light, the evidence recounted above supported
    Chambliss’s conviction for felony murder predicated on the aggra-
    vated assault of shooting Herring. See OCGA § 16-5-1 (c) (“A person
    commits the offense of murder, when, in the commission of a felony,
    he or she causes the death of another human being irrespective of
    malice.”); OCGA § 16-5-20 (a) (a person commits assault when he
    “[a]ttempts to commit a violent injury to the person of another” or
    “[c]ommits an act which places another in reasonable apprehension
    of immediately receiving a violent injury”); OCGA § 16-5-21 (a) (2)
    (a person commits aggravated assault when he commits an assault
    “[w]ith a deadly weapon”). That evidence authorized the jury to con-
    clude that Chambliss and Herring got into an argument, she hit him
    with an umbrella, and in response, Chambliss retrieved his gun,
    loaded it, told Herring to leave, followed her outside with the gun,
    and ultimately shot her in the face, killing her.
    Chambliss contends that the State failed to disprove beyond a
    reasonable doubt his theories of self-defense, defense of habitation,
    and accident. His story at trial was that his gun fired accidentally
    7
    after he hit Herring with it to defend himself from her umbrella. But
    “questions about the existence of justification are for a jury to de-
    cide,” Corley v. State, 
    308 Ga. 321
    , 322 (1) (a) (
    840 SE2d 391
    ) (2020),
    and the evidence authorized the jury to reject Chambliss’s version of
    events (and therefore his defenses). That evidence included the med-
    ical examiner’s testimony that the fatal shot was fired approxi-
    mately six-to-twelve inches from Herring’s face, and that she did not
    suffer a “contact wound” that would have occurred if the muzzle of
    the gun were in contact with the skin when it was discharged—that
    is, evidence the jury could have thought was “at odds with”
    Chambliss’s account at trial that the gun went off on impact with
    Herring’s face. See Ferguson v. State, 
    297 Ga. 342
    , 344 (1) (
    773 SE2d 749
    ) (2015). And the evidence would also allow the jury to reject the
    theory Chambliss advanced during closing argument, that he could
    have dropped the gun after he struck Herring and it accidentally
    discharged when it fell, either because the jury disbelieved this story
    (which was not even supported by Chambliss’s own testimony) or
    because the jury could reasonably conclude from the evidence that
    8
    the bullet would have to travel well over twelve inches from the
    ground to Herring’s face.
    Further, the jury was authorized to reject Chambliss’s theory
    of self-defense on the basis that he could not have reasonably be-
    lieved that his use of force was necessary to prevent death or great
    bodily injury to himself from Herring’s umbrella. See OCGA § 16-3-
    31 (a).2 The jury was also authorized to reject Chambliss’s theory of
    defense of habitation on the basis that it was unreasonable for
    Chambliss to believe that Herring was attempting, making, or had
    made an unlawful entry into his home that required deadly force to
    protect against; the evidence showed that she was invited there, left
    the home when Chambliss asked her to, and was leaving when he
    2 OCGA § 16-3-21 (a) states: “A person is justified in threatening or using
    force against another when and to the extent that he or she reasonably believes
    that such threat or force is necessary to defend himself or herself or a third
    person against such other’s imminent use of unlawful force; however, except
    as provided in Code Section 16-3-23, a person is justified in using force which
    is intended or likely to cause death or great bodily harm only if he or she rea-
    sonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent death or great bodily
    injury to himself or herself or a third person or to prevent the commission of a
    forcible felony.”
    9
    says she came at him with her umbrella. See OCGA § 16-3-23 (3).3
    And, in any event, the jury was authorized to conclude that it was
    unreasonable to believe that his use of force was necessary to protect
    against Herring and her umbrella. See Clark v. State 
    307 Ga. 537
    ,
    540-541 (1) (
    837 SE2d 265
    ) (2019) (“The statute [OCGA § 16-3-23]
    makes plain that . . . the defendant must have reasonably believed
    that the use of deadly force was necessary.”).
    3. Instructional Errors
    Chambliss       claims    three        instructional   errors.    Because
    3 OCGA § 16-3-23 states: “A person is justified in threatening or using
    force against another when and to the extent that he or she reasonably believes
    that such threat or force is necessary to prevent or terminate such other’s un-
    lawful entry into or attack upon a habitation; however, such person is justified
    in the use of force which is intended or likely to cause death or great bodily
    harm only if:
    (1) The entry is made or attempted in a violent and tumultuous manner
    and he or she reasonably believes that the entry is attempted or made
    for the purpose of assaulting or offering personal violence to any per-
    son dwelling or being therein and that such force is necessary to pre-
    vent the assault or offer of personal violence;
    (2) That force is used against another person who is not a member of the
    family or household and who unlawfully and forcibly enters or has
    unlawfully and forcibly entered the residence and the person using
    such force knew or had reason to believe that an unlawful and forcible
    entry occurred; or
    (3) The person using such force reasonably believes that the entry is
    made or attempted for the purpose of committing a felony therein and
    that such force is necessary to prevent the commission of the felony.”
    10
    Chambliss did not object to the trial court’s jury instructions on any
    of the grounds he now argues on appeal, we review these claims for
    plain error. See OCGA § 17-8-58 (b). To show plain error, Chambliss
    must establish that “(1) the alleged error was not affirmatively
    waived, (2) it was obvious beyond reasonable dispute, and (3) it af-
    fected the appellant’s substantial rights, which ordinarily means
    showing that it affected the outcome of the trial.” Moore v. State, 
    315 Ga. 263
    , 272-273 (4) (
    882 SE2d 227
    ) (2022). If an appellant makes
    that showing, the appellate court has the discretion to remedy the
    error if it “seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public repu-
    tation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Id. at 273
     (4) (citation and punctua-
    tion omitted). We address each claimed instructional error in turn.
    (a) Simple Assault Instruction
    Chambliss contends that the trial court plainly erred when it
    charged the jury that a person commits simple assault when “he at-
    tempts to cause a violent injury to another person.” Chambliss’s ar-
    gument appears to turn on the difference between the text of this
    instruction and the text of OCGA § 16-5-20 (a) (1), which provides
    11
    that a person commits the offense of simple assault when he
    “[a]ttempts to commit a violent injury to the person of another.” But
    Chambliss offers no further explanation or authority in support of
    this argument, and we can discern no material difference between
    these slightly different articulations of the offense. So Chambliss
    has not shown either that the trial court committed an obvious error
    or that it affected his substantial rights. See Ash v. State, 
    312 Ga. 771
    , 794 (5) (a) (
    865 SE2d 150
    ) (2021) (concluding the trial court did
    not plainly err, even though it omitted part of a pattern jury instruc-
    tion, because the defendant did not cite any controlling authority on
    point and therefore did not establish that doing so was a clear or
    obvious error); Hornbuckle v. State, 
    300 Ga. 750
    , 754-755 (4) (
    797 SE2d 113
    ) (2017) (concluding that the trial court did not plainly err
    by failing to further define terms used in its given jury instruction
    because the trial court gave a complete charge and the defendant
    did not demonstrate that providing additional definitions would
    have affected the outcome of the trial).
    12
    (b) Involuntary Manslaughter Instructions
    Chambliss also contends that the trial court plainly erred by
    not instructing the jury on misdemeanor and felony involuntary
    manslaughter.
    (i) Chambliss contends that the trial court should have in-
    structed the jury on misdemeanor (or “lawful act”) involuntary man-
    slaughter as a lesser offense. Under OCGA § 16-5-3 (b), a person
    commits misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter “when he causes
    the death of another human being without any intention to do so, by
    the commission of a lawful act in an unlawful manner likely to cause
    death or great bodily harm.” On appeal, Chambliss contends that
    when he struck Herring in the head with the gun, he was acting
    “lawfully” in self-defense or defense of habitation, but in an “unlaw-
    ful manner” because he used excessive force and hit her in a way
    that amounted to reckless conduct, battery, or simple battery.
    We have consistently rejected this kind of argument in support
    of instructing the jury on misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter.
    “[A] defendant asserting justification by self-defense is not entitled
    13
    to an additional instruction on involuntary manslaughter under ei-
    ther subsection of OCGA § 16-5-3 on the theory that the defendant
    used excessive force in self-defense.” McIver v. State, 
    314 Ga. 109
    ,
    134 (3) (f) n.47 (
    875 SE2d 810
    ) (2022) (citing Saylors v. State, 
    251 Ga. 735
    , 737 (3) (
    309 SE2d 796
    ) (1983); Crawford v. State, 
    245 Ga. 89
    , 94 (3) (
    263 SE2d 131
    ) (1980)). In rejecting this argument, we
    have reasoned that “no crime is committed if the defendant was jus-
    tified in killing and, if he was not justified, the homicide is not the
    ‘lawful act’ required for misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter.”
    White v. State, 
    287 Ga. 713
    , 720 (3) (c) (
    699 SE2d 291
    ) (2010). See
    also Saylors, 
    251 Ga. at 737
     (3) (same). Just so here. Thus,
    Chambliss has not established that the trial court obviously erred in
    not instructing the jury on “lawful act” involuntary manslaughter.
    See White, 
    287 Ga. at 714, 719-720
     (3) (c) (concluding that the de-
    fendant was not entitled to a jury instruction on misdemeanor invol-
    untary manslaughter based on his contention that he acted lawfully
    in self-defense when he pushed the victim and caused her to hit her
    head, which led to her death); Saylors, 
    251 Ga. at 735-736, 737
     (3)
    14
    (concluding that the defendant was not entitled to a jury instruction
    on misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter based on his contention
    that he acted lawfully in self-defense when he stabbed the victim at
    a high school reunion).
    (ii) Chambliss also contends that the trial court should have
    instructed the jury on felony (or “unlawful act”) involuntary man-
    slaughter. See OCGA § 16-5-3 (a) (“A person commits the offense of
    involuntary manslaughter in the commission of an unlawful act
    when he causes the death of another human being without any in-
    tention to do so by the commission of an unlawful act other than a
    felony,” and, “upon conviction thereof, shall by punished by impris-
    onment for not less than one year nor more than ten years.”). See
    also OCGA § 16-1-3 (5) (defining “felony,” in relevant part, as “a
    crime punishable . . . by imprisonment for more than 12 months”).
    Chambliss argues that this charge was supported by slight evidence
    that he committed the misdemeanor of reckless conduct by hitting
    Herring with a loaded gun, which caused her death.
    15
    But again, the law does not support Chambliss’s theory. Strik-
    ing Herring with the loaded gun would not be merely misdemeanor
    reckless conduct. See OCGA § 16-5-60 (b).4 That specific act would
    amount to aggravated assault, see OCGA § 16-5-21 (a) (2),5 a felony,
    see OCGA § 16-5-21 (b). See also Johnson v. State, 
    281 Ga. 229
    , 230
    (1) (
    637 SE2d 393
    ) (2006) (concluding there was sufficient evidence
    to support the defendant’s conviction for aggravated assault where
    the evidence showed the defendant struck the victim in the head
    with a gun). And if an act causing death is a felony, a requested
    charge on felony involuntary manslaughter is properly denied, even
    when the same conduct could also amount to a lesser, misdemeanor
    offense, such as the reckless conduct Chambliss says the evidence
    4 Under OCGA § 16-5-60 (b), “[a] person who causes bodily harm to or
    endangers the bodily safety of another person by consciously disregarding a
    substantial and unjustifiable risk that his or her act or omission will cause
    harm or endanger the safety of the other person and the disregard constitutes
    a gross deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable person would
    exercise in the situation is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
    5 Under OCGA § 16-5-21 (a) (2), “[a] person commits the offense of aggra-
    vated assault when he or she assaults [i.e., “[c]ommits an act which places an-
    other in reasonable apprehension of immediately receiving a violent injury,”
    OCGA § 16-5-20 (a) (2)]…[w]ith a deadly weapon or with any object, device, or
    instrument which, when used offensively against a person, is likely to or actu-
    ally does result in serious bodily injury.”
    16
    supports. See Smith v. State, 
    315 Ga. 357
    , 363-364 (3) (
    882 SE2d 289
    ) (2022) (concluding the trial court did not err by refusing to in-
    struct the jury on unlawful act involuntary manslaughter predi-
    cated on the misdemeanors of discharging a firearm while under the
    influence of drugs or alcohol, OCGA § 16-11-134, and discharging a
    firearm on the property of another, OCGA § 16-11-104, where the
    same conduct amounted to the felony of possession of a firearm by a
    convicted felon); Welch v. State, 
    306 Ga. 470
    , 474 (2) (
    821 SE2d 761
    )
    (2019) (rejecting defendant’s argument that the trial court erred by
    not instructing the jury on unlawful act involuntary manslaughter
    based on the misdemeanor of reckless conduct because the appellant
    “ignore[d] the fact that all of these acts, under the facts of this case,
    constitute felonies”); Hood v. State, 
    303 Ga. 420
    , 427-428 (3) (
    811 SE2d 392
    ) (2018) (holding that the trial court did not obviously err
    in failing to charge the jury on appellant’s “convoluted theory of in-
    voluntary manslaughter based on reckless conduct” where the acts
    underlying his reckless conduct argument amounted to felonies). Be-
    17
    cause Chambliss was not entitled to a jury instruction on felony in-
    voluntary manslaughter based on reckless conduct (specifically, hit-
    ting Herring in the face with the loaded gun), the trial court did not
    obviously err in not giving this instruction, and Chambliss has not
    established plain error.
    4. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Chambliss contends that his trial counsel provided constitu-
    tionally ineffective assistance by failing to request jury charges on
    misdemeanor and felony involuntary manslaughter, the same jury
    instructions addressed in Division (3) (b) above. To establish ineffec-
    tive assistance of counsel, a defendant must show that his counsel’s
    performance was professionally deficient and that he suffered prej-
    udice as a result. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687
    (III) (104 SCt 2052, 80 LE2d 674) (1984). “To satisfy the deficiency
    prong, a defendant must demonstrate that his attorney ‘performed
    at trial in an objectively unreasonable way considering all the cir-
    cumstances and in the light of prevailing professional norms.’” Reese
    18
    v. State, 
    317 Ga. 189
    , 199 (4) (
    891 SE2d 835
    ) (2023) (citation omit-
    ted). To establish prejudice, a defendant must show “that there is a
    reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s deficiency, the result
    of the trial would have been different.” Washington v. State, 
    313 Ga. 771
    , 773 (3) (
    873 SE2d 132
    ) (2022). As discussed in Division 3 (b),
    Chambliss has failed to show that he was entitled to jury instruc-
    tions on the lesser offenses of felony and misdemeanor involuntary
    manslaughter, so he also has not established that his trial counsel
    performed deficiently by failing to request these instructions. See
    Matthews v. State, 
    311 Ga. 531
    , 545-546 (4) (a) (
    858 SE2d 718
    ) (2021)
    (“The failure to make a meritless motion or objection does not pro-
    vide a basis upon which to find ineffective assistance of counsel.”
    (punctuation and citation omitted)).
    Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S23A0802

Filed Date: 12/19/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/19/2023