Carroll v. State
| Decision Date | 24 October 2001 |
| Docket Number | No. A01A1465, No. A01A1588. |
| Citation | Carroll v. State, 555 S.E.2d 807, 252 Ga. App. 142 (Ga. App. 2001) |
| Parties | CARROLL v. The STATE. Adger v. The State. |
| Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Thomas J. Gustinella, Savannah, for appellant (case no. A01A1465).
Jackson & Schiavone, Steven L. Sparger, for appellant (case no. A01A1588).
Spencer Lawton, Jr., Dist. Atty., Ronald M. Adams, Asst. Dist. Atty., for appellee. RUFFIN, Judge.
A jury found co-defendants Eddie Lee Carroll and Herman Adger guilty of selling cocaine and possessing cocaine with intent to distribute.1 Both defendants moved for a new trial, which the trial court denied, and these appeals followed. In Case No. A01A1465, Carroll challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, claims that the trial court made a charging error, and argues that he was denied effective assistance of counsel. Adger appeals in Case No. A01A1588, alleging the same charging error and also ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Because both appeals involve the same operative facts, we have consolidated them for review, and for reasons that follow, we affirm.
"On appeal, the appellant[s] no longer enjoy[ ] the presumption of innocence, and we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the verdict."2 Viewed in this manner, the evidence shows that on August 28, 1998, the Chatham County Counter Narcotics Team conducted a "buy-bust" drug operation in Savannah. During that operation, Adger approached undercover agent Gerald Dillard on the street. According to Dillard, Adger asked him if he was "straight," which—in "street language"—referred to whether Dillard had any drugs. Dillard responded, "no, I'm looking for something." Adger inquired what Dillard was looking for, and Dillard replied, "a 15 piece, I don't have but $15." Adger stated, "my boy's got some over here," and he led Dillard to a wooden fence at the end of a nearby street.
Adger knocked on the fence, and Carroll appeared from behind the enclosure. At Adger's request, Dillard gave Adger the $15, which consisted of a $10 and a $5 bill bearing serial numbers that Dillard had recorded before the undercover operation began. Adger handed the money to Carroll and said, "let me get something for 15." Carroll then went back inside the fence. Dillard asked Adger why Carroll left. Adger replied, "he's good, he's gonna bring it to me."
Sometime later, the fence gate opened, and Carroll reappeared with a woman named Virgie Robinson. As Dillard and Adger walked toward the fence, Dillard saw Carroll hand Robinson a substance, then retreat back inside the fence. Robinson gave Dillard the substance, which the crime lab identified as cocaine.
Police arrested Adger shortly thereafter. Carroll, however, left the area before arresting officers arrived on the scene. Dillard and another officer later saw Carroll walking out of a nearby liquor store with a bag of potato chips and arrested him. Dillard searched Carroll for the money used in the buy-bust operation, but found no money. Officers then took Carroll back into the liquor store, where the manager verified that Carroll had purchased potato chips. Among the currency in the liquor store cash register, officers found the $5 bill used by Dillard in the buy-bust operation.
Both Carroll and Adger testified at trial. According to Adger, Agent Dillard approached him on the street and asked whether he was "straight." Adger responded that he did not have any drugs. At that point, an individual identified only as "Bubba" pulled up in a car. Adger spoke with Bubba and told Dillard that Bubba might be able to obtain some drugs. Dillard, Adger and Bubba then walked towards Carroll's fence. Adger testified that he accompanied the two men only because Dillard was scared to follow Bubba by himself. Adger further testified that Dillard gave the money to Bubba, who called for Robinson as they approached Carroll's yard. Bubba left with the money, and Robinson gave Dillard a piece of cocaine. In Adger's view, only Dillard, Bubba, and Robinson participated in the actual drug transaction.
Carroll's testimony also included a reference to Bubba. Carroll testified that Dillard, Adger, and Bubba appeared outside his fence, but he told them to leave, never took any money from Adger, and did not give any drugs to Virgie Robinson.
1. In his first enumeration of error, Carroll argues that the evidence did not support his convictions. We disagree. The State presented evidence that Carroll took Agent Dillard's money from Adger, left the scene, then returned with Robinson. He handed a substance later identified as cocaine to Robinson, who gave the cocaine to Agent Dillard. Furthermore, Carroll was arrested after making a purchase at a liquor store, where officers recovered a $5 bill used in the drug transaction. Based on this evidence, a rational trier of fact could find Carroll guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of selling cocaine and possessing cocaine with the intent to distribute.3 Although Carroll denied involvement in the drug transaction, "[t]he jury was authorized to resolve the conflicts in the evidence and reject [Carroll's] testimony."4
2. Carroll also argues that the trial court improperly charged the jury on conduits and procuring agents. The trial court instructed jurors on parties to a crime, stating: It further charged "that under Georgia law, one may not act as a conduit or procuring agent and thus escape culpability or blame as a seller."
When reviewed for error, "the charge to the jury is to be taken as a whole and not out of context."5 The charge must be sufficiently clear to be understood by jurors of ordinary intelligence.6 On appeal, Carroll does not claim that the court's conduit/procuring agent charge misstated the law.7 Instead, he argues that the charge unnecessarily particularized the general charge on parties to a crime and could have been "interpreted by the jury as an intimation of opinion by the court." He likens this charge to the jury instruction on "flight," which the Supreme Court disapproved in Renner v. State,8 in part because a jury might interpret a flight charge as an expression of opinion that "there is evidence of flight and that the circumstances of flight imply the guilt of the defendant."
Carroll has made no effort to explain how the conduit/procuring agent charge could be viewed as expressing the trial court's "opinion." In Renner, the Supreme Court determined that jurors could interpret a flight charge as expressing the trial court's opinion that flight implies guilt because "the trial court does not give specific charges on other circumstances from which guilt or innocence may be inferred."9 Carroll has not suggested a similar way in which the conduit/procuring agent charge intimates the trial court's opinion, and we find none.
Read as a whole, the court's instructions properly charged jurors on parties to a crime. The trial court gave the general definition of parties, then added a statement about conduits and procuring agents. This additional statement could be viewed as unnecessary or repetitive. Considering the entire charge, however, we cannot conclude that any unnecessary or superfluous language in the conduit/procuring agent instruction harmed Carroll.10 Accordingly, this enumeration of error presents no basis for reversal.
3. Finally, Carroll argues that he did not receive effective assistance of trial counsel. Following the hearing on Carroll's motion for new trial, the trial court rejected this claim. On appeal, we will affirm this ruling unless it is clearly erroneous.11
Carroll argues that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to move for a mistrial after a potential juror stated during voir dire that Carroll had been incarcerated. To succeed on this claim, Carroll must show that his trial counsel's performance was deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced his defense.12 The prejudice prong requires Carroll to establish "a reasonable likelihood that, but for counsel's error[ ], the outcome of the trial would have been different."13
The record shows that, during voir dire, the prosecutor asked the panel whether anyone knew Carroll. A venire member employed by the sheriff's department responded, "[w]hile he was incarcerated, while he was incarcerated." At the request of Carroll's counsel, the trial court excused the potential juror for cause. Carroll contends, however, that counsel also should have moved for a mistrial. According to Carroll, the prospective juror's reference to his incarceration tainted the jury panel, presumably by placing his character at issue.
At the new trial hearing, trial counsel testified that he did not move for a mistrial because he thought such a motion would be frivolous. Given the circumstances of this case, we agree. In Taylor v. State,14 our Supreme Court indicated that "mere mention that a defendant has been in jail falls short of placing his character at issue."15 The prospective juror in this case simply stated that he knew Carroll while Carroll was incarcerated. Under Taylor, that statement did not place Carroll's character at issue or taint the proceedings. Any motion for mistrial or to disqualify the jury on this basis, therefore, likely would have been frivolous.16 Failure to make a frivolous motion does not constitute deficient performance.17
Furthermore, even if counsel's performance could be viewed as deficient, we find no prejudice. In light of the significant evidence against Carroll, including Agent Dillard's eye-witness testimony and the $5 bill recovered from the liquor store, there is no reasonable likelihood that the potential juror's comment...
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