Johnson v. the State.

Decision Date18 March 2011
Docket NumberNo. S10A1720.,S10A1720.
Citation288 Ga. 803,708 S.E.2d 331
PartiesJOHNSONv.The STATE.
CourtGeorgia Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Dennis R. Scheib, Atlanta, for appellant.Thurbert E. Baker, Attorney General, Bettieanne C. Hart, Atlanta, Paul L. Howard, Jr., District Attorney, Paula Khristian Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Elizabeth Anne Harris, Assistant Attorney General, Peggy Ann Katz, Asst. Dist. Atty., for appellee.NAHMIAS, Justice.

Melvin Johnson appeals his convictions for malice murder and other crimes in connection with the shooting death of Casimiro Ybarra. We affirm. 1

1. The evidence at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, showed the following. On March 26, 2004, the victim contacted Ceylon Mason and arranged to purchase cocaine from him. Mason met up with his supplier, Johnson, and called the victim to come and meet the two of them. The victim put $1,000 in cash in his pocket, and his fiancée, Maria Lemus, drove him to meet Johnson and Mason at the Maple Creek Apartments. On the way, Lemus spoke to a man on her cell phone, whom she later identified as Mason. When they arrived at the apartment complex, Mason and Johnson got into the back seat and gave Lemus directions to drive to a house.

Along the way, Johnson pulled out a gun and shot the victim in the head. Lemus started screaming, put the car in park, and exclaimed that she needed to take the victim, who was not moving, to the hospital. Johnson pointed the gun at Lemus and ordered her out of the car. When she failed to comply, Mason physically dragged her out, threw her on the ground, and told her that she did not want to die that night. Johnson asked Lemus where the money was, and she told him that it was in the victim's pocket. Mason got into the front seat, took the wheel, and drove off with Johnson and the victim still in the car. Lemus could tell that her fiancé was already dead.

After a while, Johnson told Mason to stop the car. Mason stopped the car, jumped out, and ran away. As he was running, he looked back and saw Johnson rummaging through the front passenger seat where the victim was. Mason later told his mother what had happened, and eight or nine days after the murder, he told the police. The police had found the victim's body in the abandoned vehicle, and the $1,000 in cash was gone. The medical examiner determined that the cause of death was a contact gunshot to the head.

Mason pled guilty to manslaughter and conspiracy to traffic cocaine. He testified at trial, as did Lemus. When viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence presented at trial and summarized above was easily sufficient to authorize a rational jury to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which he was convicted. See Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979). See also Vega v. State, 285 Ga. 32, 33, 673 S.E.2d 223 (2009) (“ ‘It was for the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses and to resolve any conflicts or inconsistencies in the evidence.’ ” (citation omitted)).

2. Johnson contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a directed verdict of acquittal because there was insufficient corroboration of Mason's testimony. As explained in Division 1, the due process standard of Jackson v. Virginia is easily satisfied, but OCGA § 24–4–8 imposes an additional requirement where a fact necessary to conviction is supported solely by the testimony of an accomplice like Mason. In “felony cases where the only witness is an accomplice, the testimony of a single witness is not sufficient” and must be supported by the testimony of at least one other witness or by “corroborating circumstances.” Id.2 The additional evidence ‘may be circumstantial and it may be slight,’ Benbow v. State, 288 Ga. 192, 194, 702 S.E.2d 180 (2010) (citation omitted), and it ‘need not of itself be sufficient to warrant a conviction of the crime charged,’ Givens v. State, 227 Ga.App. 861, 862, 490 S.E.2d 530 (1997) (citation omitted). It must, however, be independent of the accomplice testimony and must “directly connect the defendant with the crime, or lead to the inference that (he) is guilty.” Baines v. State, 276 Ga. 117, 119, 575 S.E.2d 495 (2003). “The sufficiency of any corroborating evidence is for the trier of fact to decide.” Matthews v. State, 284 Ga. 819, 820, 672 S.E.2d 633 (2009).

The testimony by Lemus, who was not an accomplice, established that another person got into the car with Mason and later shot and killed her fiancé. The fact necessary to conviction on which Mason's testimony required corroboration was his identification of Johnson as that second person. 3 As Johnson correctly notes, there was no forensic evidence linking him to the crimes or the crime scene, and Lemus could not directly identify Johnson at trial as the shooter. She did, however, confirm that the shooter was an African–American male and the additional description she had given to the police: “The second guy who ended up having the gun was wearing a white t-shirt, some blue jeans, and a black hat, about 20 to 28 years old, about six feet tall, really thin.” When the police showed her a photographic lineup that did not include Johnson, she said that the shooter was not in the lineup but noted that two of the men on the card resembled the shooter. In addition, a friend of Mason's testified that she had often seen Johnson and Mason together and that they at one time lived next door to each other in the Maple Creek Apartments.

The physical description of the shooter that Lemus provided to the police fits Johnson, and her description of the shooter's clothes was consistent with Mason's trial testimony about what Johnson was wearing that day. The jury could decide for itself at trial how closely the two men from the photographic lineup resembled Johnson, and the testimony of Mason's friend showed that Johnson was a known associate of Mason and connected Johnson to the apartment complex where the victim and Lemus picked up Mason and the shooter. Although it was not the strongest corroboration, the testimony of the victim's fiancée and Mason's friend was sufficient to corroborate Mason's testimony directly identifying Johnson as the shooter. See Benbow, 288 Ga. at 194, 702 S.E.2d 180 (holding that even slight corroborating evidence is sufficient). Accordingly, there was no violation of OCGA § 24–4–8.

3. The trial court properly charged the jury that accomplice testimony requires corroboration. The jury then sent the court a note early in its deliberations asking: (1) “What is the definition of an accomplice?”; (2) “If an individual is an accomplice to one of a number of charges, is all of his/her testimony an accomplice's testimony?”; and (3) “If he/she pleads guilty, is he/she automatically an accomplice?” The parties agreed that the court should read the Black's Law Dictionary definition of an accomplice to the jury in response to the first question and tell the jury that the answer to the second question was “yes.” They disagreed about the proper response to the third question. Johnson contended that the court should tell the jury that the answer was “yes,” that is, if a witness pleads guilty, he or she automatically is an accomplice. However, the court answered the question as the State suggested, simply repeating its prior instruction that “whether or not any witness in this case was an accomplice is a question for you to determine from the evidence in this case.”

We have long held that it is “not error to submit to the jury the question of whether a witness for the state was or was not an accomplice even where the witness ha[s] confessed to being an accomplice and ha[s] been jointly indicted with the defendant on trial.” Milton v. State, 248 Ga. 192, 196, 282 S.E.2d 90 (1981). See also Almand v. State, 149 Ga. 182, 183, 99 S.E. 795 (1919) (rejecting the argument that the trial court erred in submitting to the jury ‘the question as to whether or not [a witness for a State] was an accomplice, when, by his evidence, he was a confessed accomplice and was jointly indicted with [the defendant] as one of the principals in the crime of murder’ (citation omitted))....

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