DocketNumber: S01A1017
Judges: Benham
Filed Date: 9/17/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/7/2024
Patricia Darlene Yaeger died as a result of a gunshot wound she received to her neck. Her husband of 30 years, appellant Trammell Starr Yaeger, was arrested for, charged with, and convicted of her murder.
1. The State presented evidence that Mrs. Yaeger had filed for divorce and was living with her twin sister. The victim, her sister, her stepbrother, and another male relative went to the marital home to remove Mrs. Yaeger’s possessions. After an hour of loading furniture into a leased truck, the victim’s stepbrother and the other male relative left. The victim’s sister testified that she and her sister were at the point of leaving when appellant told the victim he could not live without her, pulled her around, told her he was going to kill her, and pushed her toward a couch, causing her to fall. The witness saw appellant straddle the victim, point a gun at the victim’s head, and pull the trigger. In a tape-recorded telephone conversation with emergency personnel several minutes later, appellant stated he had killed his wife. During an interview with law-enforcement investigators later that day, appellant stated he had planned to kill his wife if she would not stay with him and had put a loaded gun in his waistband before she and the other relatives arrived to move her possessions. At trial, appellant testified that the victim had hugged or kissed him as she and her sister were leaving and he suggested that they talk. She turned around, kicking his right foot and stepping on it. He grabbed her to keep from falling and they hit the couch. Somehow, his gun got from his waistband to his hand and it went off, fatally wounding the victim. Appellant deduced that he must have shot her from the fact that “the next thing [he] knew there was a puddle of blood at her head. . . .” The evidence presented by the State was sufficient to authorize the jury to find appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of murder and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
2. Appellant contends the trial court committed reversible error when it failed to give appellant’s requested charges on post-traumatic stress disorder and voluntary manslaughter.
(a) Appellant maintains that expert testimony that he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder entitled him to a charge instructing the jury that “the evidence [he] suffers from post-traumatic stréss disorder was admitted for [the jury’s] consideration
(b) Appellant contends the trial court erred when it declined to give his requested charge on voluntary manslaughter. A trial court is required, pursuant to a request, to charge the jury on an offense when slight evidence is presented that the defendant committed the offense. Alexis v. State, supra, 273 Ga. 423, 424 (2).
A person commits the offense of voluntary manslaughter when he causes the death of another human being under circumstances which would otherwise be murder and if he acts solely as the result of a sudden, violent, and irresistible passion resulting from serious provocation sufficient to excite such passion in a reasonable person.
OCGA § 16-5-2 (a). Pretermitting whether the victim’s kicking and stepping on appellant’s foot constitutes the serious provocation necessary for voluntary manslaughter is the fact that there is no evi
3. Appellant also maintains the trial court’s charge on involuntary manslaughter was incomplete. The trial court instructed the jury that involuntary manslaughter is committed when a person causes the death of a human being without intent to do so by the commission of a misdemeanor, in this case, disorderly conduct. See OCGA § 16-5-3 (a). Appellant contends the charge on involuntary manslaughter should have included the commission of criminal negligence as the misdemeanor.
Without deciding whether the evidence authorized a charge on involuntary manslaughter committed as a result of criminal negligence, we conclude that any error in failing to give the requested charge was harmless. The jury was instructed to consider the lesser offense of involuntary manslaughter only if they did not believe beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant was guilty of malice murder. Such a sequential charge is acceptable so long as the trial court does not insist upon unanimity with regard to the jury’s decision on the greater offense. Cantrell v. State, 266 Ga. 700, 702, n. 2 (469 SE2d 660) (1996). See also Jackson v. State, 267 Ga. 130 (12) (475 SE2d 637) (1996), where this Court found no error in the trial court’s sequential charge on malice murder followed by involuntary manslaughter; and Welch v. State, 217 Ga. App. 412 (3) (457 SE2d 829) (1995), where the Court of Appeals found no error in a charge that required the jury to consider the offense charged initially and to consider the lesser offense if it had a reasonable doubt as to the offense charged. Because the jury in the present case returned a guilty verdict on malice murder, thereby determining that all the elements of the greater offense existed, and because the lesser offense of involuntary manslaughter provides no “defense” to the greater offense as the “passion” element of voluntary manslaughter provides when malice or felony murder is involved, there was no reversible error in failing to give the jury another possible involuntary manslaughter option. See Swayzer v. State, 263 Ga. 690 (1) (436 SE2d 652) (1993).
Judgment affirmed.
The crime occurred on October 2, 1999, and appellant was arrested the same day. He
See Johnson v. State, 266 Ga. 624, 625, n. 3 (469 SE2d 152) (1996), where we proceeded under the same reservation.