Wiggins v. the State , 330 Ga. App. 205 ( 2014 )


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  •                                THIRD DIVISION
    BARNES, P. J.,
    BOGGS and BRANCH, JJ.
    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.
    http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/
    November 18, 2014
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A14A0785. WIGGINS v. THE STATE.
    BARNES, Presiding Judge.
    A jury convicted Rebecca Wiggins of sexual exploitation of children,
    aggravated sodomy, child molestation, and cruelty to children in the first degree, and
    after merging the last two offenses with the sodomy offense, she was sentenced to life
    in prison on the aggravated sodomy count and to twenty years consecutively on the
    exploitation count. On appeal, she enumerates seven errors, contending among other
    things that the evidence was insufficient and that the trial court erred in failing to
    exercise its discretion under OCGA §§ 5-5-20 and 5-5-21. Although the evidence was
    sufficient, the trial court did not exercise its discretion and weigh the evidence under
    the general grounds. Accordingly, we must vacate the denial of Wiggins’ motion for
    new trial and remand for further proceedings that are consistent with this opinion.
    Wiggins was indicted on four counts: (1) sexual exploitation of children
    between November 17, 2001 and November 16, 2003 for using and enticing a minor,
    N.G., to lewdly exhibit her genitals for the purpose of producing a photograph; (2)
    for aggravated sodomy between February 25, 2004, and September 30, 2004; by
    aiding and encouraging David Ray to perform an act of sodomy with N.G., who was
    younger than ten; (3) for child molestation during the same time period as counts 2
    and 3 by taking N.G. to Ray’s home and holding her while Ray sodomized the child;
    and (4) for cruelty to children in the first degree during that time period by causing
    N.G. excessive mental pain by taking her to Ray’s home and holding her hand while
    Ray sodomized the child.
    When determining whether the State presented sufficient evidence to support
    a criminal conviction,
    [w]e view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict,
    and the defendant no longer enjoys the presumption of innocence. We
    do not weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility, but only
    determine if the evidence was sufficient for a rational trier of fact to find
    the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Valentine v. Smith, 
    301 Ga. App. 630
    , 630-631 (689 SE2d 76) (2009).
    2
    So viewed, the evidence at trial established that N.G. and her younger sisters
    T.W. and M.W. first came to the attention of authorities in Savannah when the police
    responded to a “domestic violence with an injury” call. The children’s mother had a
    red mark on her face, as if someone had hit her, and the children recounted that the
    mother’s boyfriend, Cesar Moran, had been hitting the mother. After Moran was
    arrested and placed in the patrol car, T.W. and N.G. approached an officer and
    reported that Moran had been molesting them. Because under police department rules
    only a Special Victims’ Unit (SVU) officer could take out a warrant against Moran
    for molestation, Moran was charged only with misdemeanor battery and was allowed
    to bond out of jail before additional charges were brought against him.
    A Savannah SVU detective assigned to the case interviewed the two older girls,
    N.G. and T.W., two days later. T.W., who was eight then, made reference to several
    men involved in their lives: David Wiggins, David Ray, and Moran. Specifically, T.
    W. disclosed that Ray was her mother’s “sugar daddy” and had bought her new
    clothes for school, then described the physical altercation with Moran that led to the
    police being called. She further disclosed that three men had molested her, beginning
    when she was five with David Wiggins, who is the defendant Rebecca Wiggins’
    brother and had previously lived with the children and their mother but was in jail
    3
    when the girls were being interviewed. T.W. then talked about having to spend the
    night with Ray at his house in Marietta, and Ray having taken pictures of her private
    area.
    The detective then interviewed N.G., who was eleven then. N.G. said Moran
    had not molested her, only hit her, but that David Wiggins had anally sodomized her
    for “[q]uite a few years,” beginning when she was seven. When the detective asked
    about Ray, N.G. sat quietly for a time, then went back to talking about David
    Wiggins.
    The detective obtained an arrest warrant for Moran for child molestation, and
    eventually U.S. Marshals tracked him to a country outside the United States. The
    warrant was outstanding as of the trial in August 2011. In December 2008, N.G. told
    her therapist that she was excited about the defendant, her “Aunt Becka,” coming to
    visit, and named her aunt as someone on her “safe place list.” Then in January 2009,
    the therapist referred to the girls’ intake notes and asked N.G. to tell her about Ray.
    N.G. went white and asked how the therapist knew about him. After the therapist
    responded that N.G.’s sister had made some disclosures about Ray, N.G. for the first
    time disclosed that the defendant used to obtain money from Ray in exchange for
    N.G. performing sexual acts with him.
    4
    The therapist testified that N.G. said her mother also obtained money from Ray
    and described a weekend when Ray took N.G. and T.W. shopping for new school
    things in exchange for her and T.W. staying overnight at Ray’s house while her
    mother and youngest sister stayed at a motel. N.G. said she locked the girls’ bedroom
    door but Ray got inside the room anyway. At the next therapy session, N.G. disclosed
    that Ray had anally sodomized T.W. that night, and said, “I didn’t know how to help
    her or what to do.”
    N.G. told the therapist that she and her sisters lived with the defendant for
    about two years while her mother was incarcerated. She said the defendant would tell
    her they “were going to get two hundred to three hundred to four hundred dollars, and
    all I had to do was give [Ray] blow jobs,” although at the time she was only seven
    and did not know what that meant. N.G. reported that the defendant took naked
    pictures of her and gave them to Ray. The therapist testified that N.G. said that the
    defendant told her about being molested by her drunken father and other abuse she
    had suffered as a child. Finally in a session in mid-February 2009, N.G. told her
    therapist that she had been to Ray’s house six or eight times and described one
    incident during which the defendant bathed her in Ray’s tub and placed her on Ray’s
    bed, where he tried unsuccessfully to penetrate her anally. N.G. told her therapist that
    5
    the defendant held her hand and told her it would be okay, and then Ray placed his
    mouth on N.G.’s vagina. N.G. described other sexual acts she performed on Ray, and
    described his house in great detail, details later confirmed by other witnesses.
    The girls were interviewed a second time by another specialist in February
    2009 because of their continued disclosures during therapy. In a subsequent session
    N.G. said that the defendant told her not to tell what was going on with Ray because
    the defendant would go to jail, the girls would go into county custody, and they
    would never see their mother again. The defendant told N.G. that if she did not
    perform sexual acts with Ray, the family would have no food and would lose their
    house.
    Ray’s wife testified that in March 2009, she was out of town when Ray called
    to tell her he was going to be accused of child molestation. When she returned home,
    he told her he had been “involved” with a family composed of a mother, an aunt, a
    boyfriend, and two girls who were accusing him of molestation. He also told his wife
    that he had let them come to the house and then gave them money to get an apartment
    because the mother was a drug addict and the children were going to be taken from
    her. Shortly after this disclosure, the police executed a search warrant at Ray’s house,
    and on April 4, 2009, Ray killed himself in his back yard with a shotgun.
    6
    A records custodian from Western Union authenticated documents showing
    that Ray had transferred money to both the defendant and the children’s mother. A
    detective reviewed the Western Union data and determined that Ray sent the mother
    a total of $54,568 beginning in June 2005, and sent the defendant a total of $9,085
    beginning in March 2004 and ending in December 2008.
    The State played portions of N.G.’s two forensic interviews during the direct
    examination of the interviewers, and Wiggins played the entire first interview.1 N.G.
    testified, confirming what she said in the interviews and to her therapist. For example,
    she testified that when she was six or seven, her aunt took photographs of her naked
    with her legs spread and gave them to Ray. In 2004, N.G.’s mother went to jail and
    the girls lived with the defendant, who took N.G. to Ray’s house eight to ten times,
    where he would touch her vagina and try to insert his private part in her butt while the
    defendant was present. The defendant bathed N.G. beforehand, told her that it would
    not hurt, and held her hand while Ray sodomized her. The defendant moved to
    Savannah with the three girls, where David Wiggins lived with them for a time and
    molested N.G. until he went to jail in 2008 and N.G. went into foster care. (Wiggins
    1
    While the recorded interviews were not transcribed when they were played
    during the trial, this Court has reviewed the recordings themselves.
    7
    was the father of N.G.’s youngest sister, M.W.) N.G. initially did not tell her therapist
    about Ray because she had promised the defendant that she would not do so.
    After the Savannah detective interviewed David Wiggins in July 2009, she
    administratively closed her investigation of him by referring the case to the district
    attorney’s office and requesting that he be arrested, but that office did not want her
    to take out a warrant. An arrest warrant for the children’s mother was outstanding as
    of trial, as was the warrant against Moran. This defendant is thus the only party
    involved in these crimes who had been prosecuted as of her trial in August 2011.
    (a) In arguing that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the convictions,
    Wiggins first notes that the State never introduced any photographs to support the
    charge of sexual exploitation of children by enticing N.G. to engage in a lewd
    exhibition of her genitals to produce a photograph. N.G. testified that Wiggins used
    a Polaroid camera to take photographs of her with her legs spread and then sent the
    pictures to Ray, and that evidence is sufficient to sustain that conviction.
    (b) As to the counts of aggravated sodomy, child molestation, and cruelty to
    children, which were merged for sentencing, Wiggins argues that the indictment
    accused David Ray of performing the actual act of sodomy, and therefore Wiggins’
    convictions were “presumably based upon her being a party to the crime.” While N.G.
    8
    testified that the acts took place at Ray’s home, Wiggins argued that N.G. could have
    become familiar with the house when her mother took her there and her sister was
    molested, and that coupled with the evidence that Wiggins was molested as a child
    and had sex with Ray for money, “you have more prejudicial facts than probative
    ones, not to mention the lapse of time from the events to trial and the intervening
    molestations by two other men.”
    “Resolving evidentiary conflicts and inconsistencies and assessing witness
    credibility are the province of the fact finder, not the appellate court.” Browner v.
    State, ___ Ga. ___ (Case No. S14A1689, decided Nov. 3, 2014). The
    above-summarized evidence was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find
    appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the offenses charged as a party to the
    crimes. Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U. S. 307
     (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
    (c) Wiggins also argues that the trial court’s standard of review was erroneous
    on her challenge to the verdict on the general grounds. Wiggins asserted in her initial
    motion for new trial the general grounds that the verdict was “decidedly and strongly
    against the weight of the evidence” and that it was “contrary to the law and principles
    of justice and equity.” She also argued that the evidence against her was insufficient
    to sustain the convictions. In its order denying Wiggins’ motion for a new trial, the
    9
    trial court applied only the Jackson v. Virginia standard in rejecting her assertions as
    follows:
    The evidence was sufficient to support the verdict. . . . Jackson v.
    Virginia, 
    443 U. S. 307
     (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979); OCGA §
    5-5-20; OCGA § 5-5-21. See also Valentine v. State, 
    301 Ga. App. 630
    [689 SE2d 76] (2009) (mother of victims properly convicted of child
    molestation and aggravated child molestation for aiding and abetting
    housemate in sexual abuse of children.)
    When considering a motion for new trial, the trial court must apply different
    standards of review for claims that the evidence was insufficient and claims made
    under “the general grounds.” These standards “address two distinct legal issues,
    illustrated by the fact that the double jeopardy clause applies when a court finds the
    evidence insufficient, but not when a court holds that the verdict was against the
    weight of the evidence.” Manuel v. State, 
    289 Ga. 383
    , 386-387 (2) (711 SE2d 676)
    (2011).
    Even when the evidence is legally sufficient to sustain a conviction, a
    trial judge may grant a new trial if the verdict of the jury is “contrary to
    … the principles of justice and equity,” OCGA § 5-5-20, or if the verdict
    is “decidedly and strongly against the weight of the evidence.” OCGA
    § 5-5-21. When properly raised in a timely motion, these grounds for a
    new trial — commonly known as the “general grounds” — require the
    10
    trial judge to exercise a broad discretion to sit as a “thirteenth juror.” In
    exercising that discretion, the trial judge must consider some of the
    things that she cannot when assessing the legal sufficiency of the
    evidence, including any conflicts in the evidence, the credibility of
    witnesses, and the weight of the evidence. Although the discretion of a
    trial judge to award a new trial on the general grounds is not boundless
    — it is, after all, a discretion that should be exercised with caution and
    invoked only in exceptional cases in which the evidence preponderates
    heavily against the verdict, — it nevertheless is, generally speaking, a
    substantial discretion.
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.) White v. State, 
    293 Ga. 523
    , 524 (2) (753 SE2d
    115) (2013); see also Walker v. State, 
    292 Ga. 262
    , 264 (2) (737 SE2d 311) (2013);
    Alvelo v. State, 
    288 Ga. 437
    , 439 (1) (704 SE2d 787) (2011) (“Only the trial court is
    authorized by law to conduct . . . an assessment” of the witnesses’ credibility in
    reviewing a motion for new trial brought pursuant to OCGA § 5-5-21.)
    The trial itself was conducted by the Honorable G. Grant Brantley and a
    different judge reviewed Wiggins’ motion for new trial. But while the discretion of
    the second judge in weighing the evidence is “narrower in scope” than the presiding
    judge’s would be, State v. Harris, 
    292 Ga. 92
    , 95 (734 SE2d 357) (2012), “after a
    thorough review of the case, even a successor judge may exercise a significant
    11
    discretion to grant a new trial on the general grounds.” White, 
    293 Ga. at 525
     (2), n.
    4.
    Here, there is no evidence that the successor judge exercised discretion,
    weighed the evidence, and determined as the “thirteenth juror” whether the verdict
    was against the great weight of the evidence or offended the principles of justice and
    equity. The order denying Wiggins’ motion for new trial shows that the trial court
    made only the legal determination that the evidence was sufficient under the
    standards of Jackson v. Virginia.
    Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand this case to the trial court for
    consideration of the motion for new trial under the appropriate discretionary standard.
    Due to this holding, it is unnecessary for us to address the remaining enumerations
    of error at this time.
    Judgment vacated and remanded with direction. Boggs and Branch, JJ.,
    concur.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A14A0785

Citation Numbers: 330 Ga. App. 205, 767 S.E.2d 798

Judges: Barnes, Boggs, Branch

Filed Date: 11/19/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/8/2024