Marco Gainey v. State ( 2022 )


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  •                                FIRST DIVISION
    BARNES, P. J.,
    BROWN and HODGES, 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.
    https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    June 1, 2022
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A22A0226. GAINEY v. THE STATE.
    HODGES, Judge.
    Following a jury trial, the Superior Court of Glynn County entered a judgment
    of conviction against Marco Gainey for five counts of sexual battery against a child
    under 16 (OCGA § 16-6-22.1 (d)) and three counts of child molestation (OCGA § 16-
    6-4 (a)).1 Gainey appeals from the trial court’s denial of his motion for new trial as
    amended, arguing that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel because
    counsel elicited bolstering testimony from a witness and failed to move to sever
    Gainey’s trial based upon his three separate victims. In the alternative, Gainey also
    1
    The jury returned guilty verdicts against Gainey on three additional counts of
    child molestation and two additional counts of sexual battery. However, the trial court
    merged these charges into Gainey’s other convictions. Gainey received a total
    sentence of 45 years to serve 40 years in prison.
    contends that his sentences should be vacated because the trial court included an
    impermissible Fourth Amendment waiver in his sentence. Finding no reversible error,
    we affirm.
    Viewed in a light most favorable to the verdict,2 the evidence adduced at trial
    revealed that 11-year-old M. G. visited her aunt in Brunswick, Glynn County, during
    the summer of 2010. Gainey, whom M. G. knew as “Polo,” also visited the aunt. On
    one occasion, when M. G. spent the night at her aunt’s house, Gainey entered M. G.’s
    room as she was “halfway asleep,” touched her breasts and her vagina, and placed her
    hands on his penis. Gainey’s abuse ended when someone called for him and he left
    the room. M. G. called for her brother, but Gainey came in with her brother.
    Eventually, M. G. was able to leave the room, find her brother alone, and told him
    what had happened.
    Meanwhile, in the summer of 2012, 14-year-old A. C. stayed with her aunt and
    her aunt’s family in Brunswick. Gainey was the father of one of A. C.’s cousins and
    also lived at the residence.3 On one evening, while A. C. was asleep, she was
    2
    See, e.g., Grimes v. State, 
    362 Ga. App. 242
     (867 SE2d 843) (2022). Gainey
    does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence.
    3
    A. C. also knew Gainey as “Polo.”
    2
    awakened by Gainey touching her breasts and his penis. Gainey’s pants were pulled
    down. When A. C. told Gainey to stop, he forcefully removed her pants and attempted
    to penetrate her vagina with his penis; he also put his fingers inside A. C.’s vagina.
    She again told him to stop, and he left the room. One of A. C.’s cousins asked her if
    anything had happened to her “because one of [the cousin’s] friends said something
    happened to another girl[;]” A. C. then confided in her cousin and told her about
    Gainey’s abuse.
    Finally, 13-year-old J. B. also resided in Brunswick in the summer of 2012. On
    one occasion, Gainey, whom J. B. also knew as “Polo,” came over to give J. B.’s
    mother a tattoo. Gainey ended up staying late, and J. B. was awakened by Gainey
    rubbing her breasts as he masturbated. When Gainey attempted to move his hand
    lower on J. B.’s body, she got up, left the room, and reported Gainey’s abuse to her
    grandmother.
    A Glynn County grand jury indicted Gainey for eight counts of child
    molestation and five counts of sexual battery against a child under 16 arising from his
    actions against each of the three victims. Following trial, a jury returned verdicts of
    guilty against Gainey on each count of the indictment, and the trial court denied
    Gainey’s motion for new trial as amended. This appeal followed.
    3
    1. In his first enumeration of error, Gainey argues that he received ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel because counsel: (a) elicited improper bolstering testimony
    during his cross-examination of a victim’s grandmother; and (b) failed to move to
    sever Gainey’s charges based upon the separate victims. We are not persuaded and,
    for the following reasons, conclude that Gainey has failed to demonstrate ineffective
    assistance of counsel.
    It is well settled that
    [t]o prevail on his claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel,
    [Gainey] must prove both that counsel’s performance was professionally
    deficient and that he was prejudiced by the deficient performance. To
    prove deficient performance, [Gainey] must show that his counsel
    performed in an objectively unreasonable way considering all the
    circumstances and in the light of prevailing professional norms. . . . To
    prove prejudice, [Gainey] must show that there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a
    probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome. This
    burden is a heavy one. And if [Gainey] fails to show either deficiency or
    prejudice, this Court need not examine the other prong of the [Strickland
    v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
    , 687 (III), 694 (III) (B) (104 SCt 2052, 80
    LE2d 674) (1984)] test.
    4
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.) DeLoach v. State, 
    308 Ga. 283
    , 287-288 (2) (840
    SE2d 396) (2020).
    (a) Bolstering Testimony. Gainey first contends that he received ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel because counsel, during his cross-examination of J. B.’s
    grandmother, elicited improper bolstering testimony about J. B.’s truthfulness. We
    do not agree.
    During Gainey’s cross-examination of J. B.’s grandmother, the following
    exchange occurred:
    Q:    Okay. And that’s — as far as you know, that’s — from the time
    you went to bed until that, you have no idea as to specifically what
    happened other than what [J. B.] told you, right?
    A:    Yes, and he was — [J. B.] did not know Polo was in the house for
    her to name Polo, to say his name. I knew he was in the house before I
    went to bed. [J. B.] never knew Polo was there until she woke up and
    seen him touching her breast.
    Q:    And, in fact, I think you might’ve told the police officer that you
    thought [J. B.] was telling the truth because she wouldn’t have known
    Polo was there, right?
    A:    I know [J. B.’s] telling the truth because she would not know Polo
    was there. Plus, I teach my grandkids to tell me everything and anything
    5
    that happens, good or bad, even if they’re getting in trouble, you take
    your medicine.
    At Gainey’s motion for new trial hearing, trial counsel testified that he asked the
    grandmother about J. B.’s truthfulness because he
    believed that [J. B.] had reason to exaggerate and she had reason to say
    things previously that had — her grandmother had found not to be true,
    and I believed — what we were trying to get out of her grandmother was
    that she — not that she would lie, but that she would exaggerate or that
    she would have illusions or other dreams, things like that, that she would
    tell her grandmother. That was my understanding of things that had
    happened in the past and that’s what we were trying to elicit from her.
    Trial counsel further testified that if he could elicit testimony from the grandmother
    that J. B. was “‘young, or sometimes she’ll say things and then I can find out that
    that’s not quite true,’ that even that would bring us a little bit of doubt to argue to the
    jury.” Finally, trial counsel confirmed that he had spoken with Gainey about such
    questioning of the grandmother “as a possible strategy.”
    We find no error. “Trial tactics and strategy, no matter how mistaken in
    hindsight, are almost never adequate grounds for finding trial counsel ineffective
    unless they are so patently unreasonable that no competent attorney would have
    chosen them.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Hardin v. State, 
    344 Ga. App. 378
    ,
    6
    383 (1) (b) (810 SE2d 602) (2018). In particular, “[d]ecisions about what questions
    to ask on cross-examination are quintessential trial strategy and will rarely constitute
    ineffective assistance of counsel.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Washington
    v. State, 
    357 Ga. App. 184
    , 189 (d) (850 SE2d 251) (2020); see also Brewer v. State,
    
    328 Ga. App. 801
     (762 SE2d 622) (2014) (“The decisions on which witnesses to call
    and all other strategies and tactical decisions are the exclusive province of the lawyer
    after consultation with his or her client.”) (citation and punctuation omitted). Here,
    even though counsel’s questioning elicited testimony that may have bolstered J. B.’s
    credibility, counsel’s strategy, which he discussed with Gainey — specifically, to
    “bring us a little bit of doubt to argue to the jury” by attempting to get the
    grandmother to admit that the victim was not always truthful — was not “so patently
    unreasonable that no competent attorney would have chosen [it].”4 (Citation and
    punctuation omitted.) Hardin, 344 Ga. App. at 383 (1) (b); see also Damerow v. State,
    
    310 Ga. App. 530
    , 538 (4) (a) (ii) (714 SE2d 82) (2011) (finding no ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel where counsel elicited bolstering testimony from victim’s
    mother to demonstrate that victim’s allegation of abuse was “totally inconsistent”
    4
    “In evaluating the reasonableness of trial strategy, every effort should be
    made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight.” (Citation and punctuation
    omitted.) DeLoach, 308 Ga. at 289 (2) (a).
    7
    with mother’s decision to allow defendant to move into her residence). It follows that
    Gainey has failed to demonstrate ineffective assistance of trial counsel based upon
    counsel’s cross-examination of J. B.’s grandmother.5
    (b) Motion to Sever. Gainey next asserts that he received ineffective assistance
    of trial counsel due to counsel’s failure to move to sever his charges because there
    were three separate victims. Again, we disagree.
    A Glynn County grand jury indicted Gainey for a total of 13 different crimes,
    consisting of both child molestation and sexual battery against a child under 16,
    against three different victims. The incidents were alleged to have occurred between
    July 4 and 10, 2010, between June 4 and October 18, 2012, and on September 26,
    2012. Trial counsel did not move to sever the counts against Gainey based upon each
    individual victim. In response to a question during Gainey’s motion for new trial
    hearing, trial counsel testified that he had considered a motion to sever Gainey’s
    charges, but concluded that he “did not see any merit in doing that.” He added that
    the events “had either happened at the same time or at least fairly close enough to the
    same time that that was going to kill any kind of motion to sever.”
    5
    Having decided that Gainey has failed to demonstrate error by trial counsel,
    we need not consider the prejudice prong of the ineffective assistance analysis. See
    DeLoach, 308 Ga. at 288 (2).
    8
    To prevail on his claim of ineffective assistance, Gainey must demonstrate that
    a motion to sever would have been successful. See generally Talley v. State, 
    269 Ga. App. 712
    , 713 (2) (b) (605 SE2d 108) (2004) (concluding that defendant failed to
    show ineffective assistance because it was “unlikely a motion to sever would have
    been successful”). This, he cannot do. Georgia law provides that
    [w]hen two or more crimes of the same general nature are committed
    against different persons, at different times and places, and are charged
    in separate counts of an indictment, severance is mandatory upon the
    defendant’s motion if the crimes are joined solely because they are of the
    same or similar character. If the offenses are not joined solely because
    they are of the same or similar character, and evidence of one charged
    offense would be admissible as a similar transaction during trial on
    another charged offense, the trial court is vested with discretion in
    deciding whether to grant a motion to sever.
    (Citation omitted; emphasis in original.) Duncan v. State, 
    315 Ga. App. 67
    , 71 (3)
    (726 SE2d 558) (2012).
    In making this decision, the court must consider the number of offenses
    charged, the complexity of the charges, and the complexity of the
    evidence and determine whether the jury will be able to fairly and
    intelligently parse the evidence and apply the law with regard to each
    charge. Where in the sound discretion of the trial court, the number of
    offenses charged and the complexity of the evidence do not reasonably
    9
    impinge upon a fair determination of the defendant’s guilt or innocence
    as to each offense charged, a severance need not be granted.
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Love v. State, 
    349 Ga. App. 741
    , 744 (2) (824
    SE2d 745) (2019). “We review a trial court’s denial of a motion to sever the trial of
    separate charges for an abuse of discretion[,]” and, to that end, we have held that “the
    trial court does not abuse its discretion by denying a motion to sever if the evidence
    of one offense would be admissible as a similar act in the trial of the other offense.”
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Id.; see also Algren v. State, 
    330 Ga. App. 1
    , 3
    (1) (764 SE2d 611) (2014) (finding that “offenses have not been joined solely because
    they are of the same or similar character when the evidence of one offense can be
    admitted as similar transaction evidence during the trial of the other offense and
    severance is not mandatory in such a case”) (citations and punctuation omitted;
    emphasis in original).
    In this case, Gainey faced multiple charges of child molestation and sexual
    battery against three different victims. Although the crimes involved different
    victims, each crime occurred against similarly-aged victims while Gainey was a
    houseguest in the victims’ residences. He approached each victim as they slept and
    abused them by touching their breasts as he touched his penis. Each of the victims
    10
    testified, and the evidence was not so complex and the charges not so numerous as
    to cause confusion. Accordingly, trying Gainey’s crimes together did not “reasonably
    impinge upon a fair determination of [Gainey’s] guilt or innocence as to each offense
    charged[;]” as a result, severance of the charges was not required. (Citation omitted.)
    Love, 349 Ga. App. at 744 (2). However, even had the charges been severed, as
    Gainey now requests, evidence of one crime would have been admissible as a prior
    act in the trial of the others. See, e.g., Payne v. State, 
    285 Ga. 137
    , 138-139 (674
    SE2d 298) (2009), overruled in part on other grounds, Reed v. State, 
    291 Ga. 10
    , 14
    (3) (727 SE2d 112) (2012); see also OCGA §§ 24-4-404 (b) (other acts evidence
    generally), 24-4-413 (other acts evidence in sexual assault cases), 24-4-414 (other
    acts evidence in child molestation cases). It follows that Gainey’s proposed motion
    to sever would have been unsuccessful, see, e.g., Love, 349 Ga. App. at 744 (2), and
    “[t]rial counsel will not be found ineffective for failing to file a futile motion.”
    Duncan, 315 Ga. App. at 72 (3). Therefore, Gainey has again failed to demonstrate
    ineffective assistance of counsel.
    2. Next, Gainey argues that the trial court impermissibly imposed a Fourth
    Amendment waiver as a condition of the probation portion of his sentence. For the
    following reasons, we conclude that Gainey has waived this argument. Furthermore,
    11
    the trial court’s imposition of a Fourth Amendment waiver is not unlawful per se and,
    therefore, the argument may not be revived under the auspices of a void sentence.
    In its second amended sentencing order,6 the trial court imposed a special
    condition of probation that Gainey
    shall submit to a search of person, residence, papers, vehicle, and/or
    effects at any time of day or night without a search warrant, whenever
    requested to do so by a Probation Officer or other law enforcement
    officer upon reasonable cause to believe that [Gainey] is in violation of
    probation or otherwise acting in violation of the law, and [Gainey] shall
    specifically consent to the use of anything seized as evidence in any
    judicial proceedings or trial.
    Gainey did not raise any argument challenging the Fourth Amendment waiver in his
    motion for new trial as amended.
    (a) Waiver. “The general rule regarding the raising of issues for the first time
    on appeal is well known” in that, save for instances of plain error which are not at
    6
    Although Gainey indicated that copies of the transcripts of the proceedings
    had been requested and “should already be filed in the Court record and should be
    included in the record on appeal[,]” the record does not contain a transcript of
    Gainey’s sentencing. Furthermore, neither party has moved to supplement the record
    to include the transcript, to the extent one exists.
    12
    issue here,7 “[a]n issue not raised during the trial in any form calling for a ruling will
    not be considered by this court.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Smith v. State,
    
    311 Ga. App. 184
    , 187 (3) (715 SE2d 434) (2011). Because Gainey failed to raise any
    argument in the trial court concerning the imposition of the Fourth Amendment
    waiver as a condition of probation, the argument has been waived. See, e.g.,
    Sevostiyanova v. State, 
    313 Ga. App. 729
    , 731-732 (2) (722 SE2d 333) (2012)
    (holding that Court of Appeals does not “consider issues raised for the first time on
    appeal, because the trial court has not had opportunity to consider them”) (citation
    and punctuation omitted); Smith, 311 Ga. App. at 187 (3).
    (b) Illegal Sentence. Nevertheless, we may still review Gainey’s claim if his
    sentence is void.8 “A sentence is void if the court imposes punishment that the law
    does not allow[,]” and the illegality of such sentences may not be waived. (Citation
    and punctuation omitted.) Jackson v. State, 
    338 Ga. App. 509
    , 509-510 (790 SE2d
    7
    See OCGA §§ 17-8-58 (b) (plain error review of jury instructions), 24-1-103
    (d) (plain error review of evidentiary rulings).
    8
    Contrary to Gainey’s argument, a Fourth Amendment waiver obtained as part
    of an express agreement in a negotiated guilty plea is not the only manner in which
    a valid Fourth Amendment waiver may arise. See Wiggins v. State, 
    323 Ga. App. 754
    ,
    756 (2) (748 SE2d 120) (2013) (noting that failure to object to trial court’s imposition
    of Fourth Amendment waiver following jury trial was tantamount to consent).
    13
    295) (2016); see also Hood v. State, 
    343 Ga. App. 230
    , 234 (1) (807 SE2d 10) (2017).
    To that end, “a sentencing court retains jurisdiction to correct a void sentence at any
    time.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Jackson, 338 Ga. App. at 509.
    Relevant to this case, we have held that a trial court’s imposition of a Fourth
    Amendment waiver as a condition of probation, without first securing a defendant’s
    consent, is erroneous, but is not “unlawful per se” and that the condition need not be
    modified. See Woods v. State, 
    275 Ga. App. 471
    , 474 (3) (620 SE2d 660) (2005);
    Millsap v. State, 
    261 Ga. App. 427
    , 429 (3) (582 SE2d 568) (2003). We have also
    concluded that any such error is harmless. See Woods, 275 Ga. App. at 474 (3);
    Millsap, 261 Ga. App. at 429 (3). As a result,
    [i]n the present case, no warrantless search has taken place in assertion
    of [Gainey’s] Fourth Amendment waiver, and we will not presume that
    any search that may take place in the future under the authority of a
    probation officer will be unreasonable, even if it is warrantless.
    Woods, 275 Ga. App. at 474 (3), citing Millsap, 261 Ga. App. at 429 (3). It follows
    that the trial court’s imposition of a Fourth Amendment waiver does not render
    Gainey’s sentence void.
    In sum, we conclude that Gainey has failed to demonstrate that he received
    ineffective assistance of counsel. We further conclude that Gainey failed to raise any
    14
    argument in the trial court concerning its imposition of a Fourth Amendment waiver,
    and the argument is now waived. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s order denying
    Gainey’s motion for new trial as amended.
    Judgment affirmed. Barnes, P. J., and Brown, J., concur.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A22A0226

Filed Date: 6/1/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/1/2022