Jeffrey Howard Clark v. State ( 2021 )


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  •                               FIFTH DIVISION
    MCFADDEN, C. J.,
    RICKMAN, P. J., and SENIOR APPELLATE JUDGE PHIPPS
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS
    COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN
    THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.
    April 1, 2021
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A21A0135. CLARK v. THE STATE.
    MCFADDEN, Chief Judge.
    After a jury trial, Jeffrey Howard Clark was convicted of various offenses
    stemming from a physical altercation between him and his 78-year-old mother. He
    argues on appeal that the state improperly withdrew a plea offer, but he has neither
    alleged nor shown trial court error in this regard. Clark also argues that he received
    ineffective assistance of trial counsel in several respects, but he is not entitled to
    reversal. In some instances he is not entitled to reversal because he has failed to show
    both deficient performance and prejudice, in others because his claims of ineffective
    assistance were not made and ruled on below and thus are procedurally barred. So we
    affirm.
    1. Trial evidence.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the trial evidence showed that
    on July 13, 2017, Clark scratched his mother’s arm and struck her in the head with
    a cell phone during an argument at their shared residence. His mother, Annette
    Richards, sustained visible injuries during the altercation, which occurred in the
    presence of Clark’s nine-year-old daughter, K. C. When law enforcement officers
    were dispatched to the residence, Clark fought with them.
    Clark presented an accident defense at trial. At the time of the incident, he was
    suffering from a badly burned foot, for which he was taking prescribed pain
    medication. Clark testified at trial that, on July 13, 2017, Richards had been drinking
    alcohol. He testified that, during a verbal argument with Richards, he took hold of her
    arm because she was unsteady and to steer her out of K. C.’s presence. He testified
    that Richards then stepped on his burned foot, causing him to fall to the ground in
    extreme pain. He speculated at trial that, when he fell, he accidentally pulled Richards
    into a wall, causing her injuries. He testified that, after the incident, he took more pain
    medication as well as a sleeping pill and that the law enforcement officers dispatched
    to the residence woke him from a deep sleep. He testified that he was angry with the
    officers because they suggested that he, a recovering alcoholic, had been drinking that
    2
    evening, and he testified that he pushed the officers in an effort to get to K. C., who
    had been taken outside the residence by one of them.
    Richards, K. C., and Clark’s other daughter, 13-year-old M. C., testified at trial
    on behalf of the state. The state presented evidence that, while he was in jail after the
    incident, Clark attempted to influence these witnesses’ testimony to support his
    accident defense.
    The trial evidence showed that Clark sent Richards letters asking her to
    withdraw the statement she had given the police and to sign an affidavit — which he
    had written — saying that the incident was an accident. In those letters, he also
    encouraged Richards to refuse to testify at trial, even if she was subpoenaed to
    appear. Richards did not see the letters, which were intercepted by Clark’s sister.
    Clark also wrote letters and sent an affidavit to M. C., who had been on a video
    call with K. C. when the incident occurred. M. C. understood that she was supposed
    to sign the affidavit to help Clark get out of jail, but she refused to do so. Clark spoke
    with M. C. on the phone from jail several times, as well, and in those calls, which
    were played to the jury, he berated and threatened the girl.
    Finally, Clark sent letters and an affidavit and made calls to K. C. In those
    communications, Clark tried to influence K. C.’s perception of the incident, including
    3
    telling her that Richards had been drunk and had stepped on his foot on the day of the
    incident; he instructed her on how to answer certain questions if asked; and he told
    her that if he was found guilty she would not see him again.
    2. Withdrawal of plea offer.
    The record shows that the state made Clark several different plea offers. At a
    hearing that occurred a few days before trial, Clark’s trial counsel initially announced
    that Clark wished to proceed with a trial. But during a recess, Clark changed his mind
    and decided to accept one of the pleas. Also during the recess, the prosecutor first
    learned of the recorded calls that Clark made to his daughters from jail, causing the
    prosecutor to decide to withdraw the plea. The prosecutor notified Clark’s trial
    counsel of this and both the prosecutor and Clark’s trial counsel listened to some of
    the recordings during that recess. Trial counsel testified at the hearing on the motion
    for new trial that he believed the calls could support an additional charge of
    influencing a witness.
    When the hearing resumed after the recess, the following occurred. The
    prosecutor announced to the trial court, “I think Mr. Clark wanted to accept the plea,
    but I don’t think that we can go forward with it.” She then explained about learning
    of Clark’s calls to his daughters and generally described one of the calls from Clark
    4
    to M. C., which she had listened to during the recess. The trial court stated, “you
    don’t have to make a plea offer if you have got new evidence,” and asked the
    prosecutor to listen to all of the calls before deciding how to proceed. The trial court
    indicated that the issue of a plea could be taken back up on the morning of trial and
    reiterated to the prosecutor that, “if you got new things that change the plea, you can
    withdraw it. You can do that.” Clark’s trial counsel did not request that the plea offer
    be enforced or otherwise object to this course of action.
    On the first day of trial, the prosecutor announced to the trial court that the
    state had made a new plea offer to Clark, taking into account the newly-discovered
    information about the calls from jail, and that Clark had declined that offer. Clark’s
    trial counsel responded: “That is correct, your honor. We did, when we were last here,
    Mr. Clark did accept the previous offer which was withdrawn. I had advised him, you
    know, that it may be in his best interest to still move forward on the plea and go non-
    negotiated, but he has decided to move forward with trial.” Again, trial counsel did
    not ask the trial court to enforce the previous offer, nor did he object to the
    withdrawal of that offer.
    On motion for new trial, Clark argued for the first time that the withdrawal of
    the plea offer was improper. The trial court denied Clark a new trial on that ground.
    5
    Assuming without deciding that Clark’s challenge to the withdrawal of the plea
    offer in his motion for new trial preserved the issue for appellate review, he has not
    shown trial court error. In his appellate brief, Clark “does not urge that the trial court
    erred in failing to enforce any agreed-upon plea bargain, nor does he otherwise
    specify any error allegedly committed by the trial court [in connection with the state’s
    withdrawal of the plea offer].” Umbehaum v. State, 
    251 Ga. App. 471
    , 473 (3) (554
    SE2d 608) (2001). Moreover, even if trial counsel had asked the trial court for
    enforcement or other relief, the trial court was not required to enforce the plea. “In
    Georgia, a trial court is not bound by a plea agreement between the defendant and the
    [s]tate and has the discretion to refuse to accept a negotiated guilty plea.” Gramiak
    v. Beasley, 
    304 Ga. 512
    , 520 (I) (D) (820 SE2d 50) (2018). And the trial court
    explicitly stated in her order that, in light of the calls Clark had made from jail, she
    would have exercised this discretion to reject the plea, explaining: “It is the Court’s
    responsibility to govern the administration of justice and protect the community,
    particularly the vulnerable populations. The Court finds that the offers failed to
    adequately protect [Clark’s] juvenile children and elderly mother.”
    Although Clark argues that the trial court did not listen to those calls during the
    pre-trial hearing, the prosecutor indicated at the hearing on the motion for new trial
    6
    that, had she been forced to proceed with the plea at that hearing, she would have
    presented the calls to the trial court at that time. Moreover, when the trial court ruled
    on Clark’s improper-withdrawal argument at the hearing on his motion for new trial,
    she had heard the recordings of the calls, because they were played at trial.
    Under these circumstances, Clark has neither asserted nor shown any abuse of
    discretion by the trial court in connection with the state’s withdrawal of the plea offer.
    See In the Interest of R. W., 
    315 Ga. App. 227
    , 232 (3) (c) (726 SE2d 708) (2012)
    (“An abuse of discretion occurs where the trial court significantly misapplies the law
    or clearly errs in a material factual finding.”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    3. Ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
    Clark argues that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel. To prevail
    on this claim, Clark “must show both that his counsel performed deficiently and that,
    but for the deficiency, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of his trial
    would have been more favorable. . . . If [Clark] fails to satisfy either the deficient
    performance or the prejudice prong of [this] test, [we are] not required to examine the
    other.” Slaton v. State, 
    303 Ga. 651
    , 652-653 (2) (814 SE2d 344) (2018) (citation and
    punctuation omitted). In reviewing the trial court’s ruling on the ineffective assistance
    of counsel claims, we accept the trial court’s factual findings and credibility
    7
    determinations unless they are clearly erroneous, but we review the trial court’s legal
    conclusions de novo. Davis v. State, 
    306 Ga. 430
    , 432 (831 SE2d 804) (2019). “And
    [as to those issues where there is an] absence of explicit factual and credibility
    findings by the trial court, we presume implicit findings were made supporting the
    trial court’s decision.” Id. at 432-433.
    Clark argues that his trial counsel was deficient in several respects: by failing
    to object when the state withdrew the plea offer; by failing to adequately cross-
    examine two of the state’s witnesses (K. C. and Richards) ; and by failing to introduce
    expert testimony to challenge Richards’s credibility. As detailed below, he has not
    shown he is entitled to reversal on any of these grounds.
    (a) Withdrawal of plea offer.
    Clark argues that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not
    objecting when the state withdrew its plea offer at the pretrial hearing. But as
    discussed above, even if Clark’s trial counsel had objected to the withdrawal, the trial
    court was not required to enforce the plea, see Gramiak, 304 Ga. at 520 (I) (D), and
    in the order denying Clark’s motion for new trial the trial court made it abundantly
    clear that she would not have accepted the plea on account of the jail calls. So any
    effort by Clark’s trial counsel to enforce a plea agreement would have been futile.
    8
    “The failure to pursue a futile objection does not amount to ineffective assistance.”
    Ventura v. State, 
    284 Ga. 215
    , 218 (4) (663 SE2d 149) (2008). See also Gramiak,
    supra (to show prejudice in this context the defendant must “show a reasonable
    probability that the trial court would not have refused to accept the plea”).
    (b) Cross-examinations.
    Clark argues that his trial court rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
    adequately cross-examine Clark’s daughter, K. C., and his mother, Richards, who
    both testified for the state. But
    [t]he scope of cross-examination is grounded in trial tactics and strategy,
    and will rarely constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. More
    specifically, the extent of cross-examination is a strategic and tactical
    decision. Decisions about cross-examination do not amount to deficient
    performance unless they are so unreasonable that no competent attorney
    would have made them under similar circumstances.
    Gaston v. State, 
    307 Ga. 634
    , 642 (2) (d) (837 SE2d 808) (2020) (citations,
    punctuation, and emphasis omitted). Clark has not made this showing.
    (i) K. C.
    Trial counsel chose not to cross-examine K. C., who was ten years old at the
    time of trial. Clark argues that this constituted deficient performance, because his trial
    9
    counsel could have elicited additional helpful testimony from K. C. on cross-
    examination, pointing to the girl’s testimony at the hearing on the motion for new
    trial. At that hearing, K. C. testified that she did not tell her mother or sister that she
    had seen Clark hit Richards, which contradicted those persons’ trial testimony. K. C.
    also testified at that hearing that Richards had been drinking and “acting a little
    loopy” on the day of the incident.
    But trial counsel testified at the hearing on the motion for new trial that he
    believed the risk of eliciting negative testimony from K. C. on cross-examination
    outweighed the potential benefit of asking her more questions. Trial counsel “felt like
    [K. C.’s] testimony on direct helped Mr. Clark, and he just didn’t want to . . . take the
    risk of any bad evidence coming in.” He explained that because K. C. testified on
    direct examination at trial that she did not see or hear Clark hit Richards, her
    testimony did not contradict the defense theory of accident. He also explained that he
    was concerned further questioning of K. C. would create the impression that Clark
    had influenced her testimony.
    Clark has not shown that trial counsel’s decision was objectively unreasonable.
    As discussed above, the state presented evidence at trial that Clark had, in fact, tried
    to influence K. C.’s trial testimony. And the trial court expressly found that K. C.’s
    10
    hearing testimony — the testimony that Clark argues should have been elicited on
    cross-examination — was not credible. Under these circumstances, “trial counsel’s
    decision [not to cross-examine her] is exactly the kind of strategic and tactical
    decision trial counsel was empowered to make.” Gaston, 307 Ga. at 643 (2) (d).
    Consequently, he cannot establish that his trial counsel performed deficiently. See id.
    (ii) Richards.
    Clark argues that his trial counsel’s cross-examination of his mother, Richards,
    was inadequate. He asserts that a more thorough cross-examination of Richards could
    have revealed that, at the time of the altercation, she was cognitively impaired due to
    a combination of alcohol and the prescription sleep medication Ambien.
    At the hearing on the motion for new trial, trial counsel testified that he decided
    not to cross-examine Richards about her drinking because “her answer [on direct
    examination as to whether she had been drinking that evening] was no, and [he]
    didn’t really want to draw anymore attention to it.” When asked whether she had
    anything to drink that evening, Richards had testified, “I have to say I don’t believe
    I did[.]” Other trial evidence, including a video recording of Richards’s interactions
    with law enforcement shortly after the incident, supported Richards’s testimony that
    11
    she had not been drinking. Instead, trial counsel elicited testimony that Richards had
    been drinking through direct examination of Clark.
    At the hearing on Clark’s motion for new trial, Richards contradicted her trial
    testimony, stating that she had been drinking that day. But this does not mean she
    would have contradicted herself had she been cross-examined on the point at trial,
    and an unsuccessful cross-examination on the point would have highlighted evidence
    that was not helpful to Clark’s defense. Under these circumstances, we cannot say
    that trial counsel was objectively unreasonable in not pursuing the issue on cross-
    examination. See Watts v. State, 
    308 Ga. 455
    , 460-461 (2) (841 SE2d 686) (2020)
    (holding that trial counsel’s decision to elicit evidence to challenge a witness’s
    credibility through a means other than cross-examination was not objectively
    unreasonable where cross-examination might highlight evidence negative to the
    defense).
    As to trial counsel’s failure to cross-examine Richards about her use of
    Ambien, we must look at what trial counsel knew about that issue at the time of his
    performance, not in hindsight in light of later-obtained information. See Belton v.
    State, 
    270 Ga. 671
    , 672-673 (3) (512 SE2d 614) (1999). At the hearing on his motion
    for new trial, Clark testified that his trial counsel was aware that Richards used
    12
    Ambien and that Clark wished to develop evidence of its effects on her, especially in
    combination with alcohol. But his trial counsel testified that, while Clark may have
    told him before trial about Richards taking sleeping medications, “most of . . . what
    [Clark] discussed was her drinking” and that, from trial counsel’s discussions with
    Clark, Richards’s use of Ambien was not “on [trial counsel’s] radar.” The trial court
    was authorized to credit trial counsel’s testimony over Clark’s testimony on this
    point. See Davis, 306 Ga. at 432-433. And based on trial counsel’s testimony about
    the matters he discussed with Clark, we cannot say that no competent attorney in his
    position would have failed to question Richards about her Ambien use. See Gaston,
    307 Ga. at 642 (2) (d).
    In support of this claim of error, Clark suggests in his appellate brief that his
    trial counsel should have done additional pre-trial research on the drugs used by
    Richards. But he did not allege insufficient trial preparation as a ground for his
    ineffective assistance claim in his motion for new trial or obtain a ruling from the trial
    court on that ground. So to the extent he argues on appeal that his trial counsel was
    deficient because his trial preparation was insufficient, that claim is procedurally
    barred. See Cowart v. State, 
    294 Ga. 333
    , 337 (3) (751 SE2d 399) (2013).
    (c) Expert testimony.
    13
    Clark argues that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to present expert
    witness testimony about the effects of alcohol and Ambien in combination. Clark did
    not assert this as a separate ground to support his claim of ineffective assistance
    before the trial court; he only raised the issue as part of his argument that his trial
    counsel was deficient in cross-examining Richards. And the trial court made no ruling
    on whether trial counsel was deficient in failing to obtain an expert witness,
    indicating that the trial court did not treat the failure to introduce expert testimony as
    one of Clark’s asserted grounds of ineffectiveness. See Cowart, 
    294 Ga. at 338
     (3)
    (trial court’s failure to address an ineffective assistance claim in ruling on a motion
    for new trial indicated that the court did not view the claim to be a part of the motion).
    This “mean[s] that there is no ruling on the issue for this [c]ourt to review.” 
    Id.
     See
    also Hornbuckle v. State, 
    300 Ga. 750
    , 756 (5) (797 SE2d 113) (2017). Because this
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel was neither raised in the motion for new
    trial nor ruled upon by the trial court, it is procedurally barred. Cowart, 
    supra at 337
    (3).
    Judgment affirmed. Rickman, P. J., and Senior Appellate Judge Herbert E.
    Phipps concur.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A21A0135

Filed Date: 4/20/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/20/2021