Phillips v. State
| Decision Date | 15 October 2002 |
| Docket Number | No. S02A0932.,S02A0932. |
| Citation | Phillips v. State, 571 S.E.2d 361, 275 Ga. 595 (Ga. 2002) |
| Parties | PHILLIPS v. The STATE. |
| Court | Georgia Supreme Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Charles H. Frier, Atlanta, for appellant.
Paul L. Howard, Jr., Dist. Atty., Bettieanne C. Hart, Asst. Dist. Atty., Thurbert E. Baker, Atty. Gen., Adam M. Hames, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.SEARS, Presiding Justice.
AppellantEric Phillips appeals his convictions for malice murder and related crimes, resulting in a life sentence,1 alleging that the trial court erred in overseeing voir dire, in its dealings with the jury, in numerous evidentiary rulings, and in expressing bias against appellant.We conclude that although the trial court erred by admitting a witness's hearsay statement under the necessity exception, the statement was cumulative of other properly introduced evidence and therefore harmless.Finding no merit to appellant's other contentions, we affirm.We remand, however, for the trial court to consider appellant's claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
The evidence at trial showed that appellant and an accomplice knocked on the door of an apartment occupied by Rideaux, Jones, Huff, Clark, and Veasy.Appellant was searching for Rideaux, with whom he had fought several days earlier.As the apartment door opened, appellant fired three shots, killing Clark.Veasy, who had been asleep on the couch, then ran out of the apartment.Appellant pursued Veasy, shot and wounded him, and asked the location of Rideaux.When Veasy replied that Rideaux was inside the apartment, appellant returned there.Unable to locate the hiding Rideaux and Huff, appellant fired several random shots and left the apartment.
1.The evidence at trial, construed most favorably to the jury's verdicts, was sufficient to enable rational triers of fact to find appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes for which he was convicted.2
2.Appellant complains that the trial court erred by not excusing a potential juror who expressed a personal bias against those accused of criminal activity, requiring appellant to use a peremptory strike against the juror.During voir dire, however, appellant did not move to strike the juror for cause, and the trial court did not err by failing to excuse the juror sua sponte.3Accordingly, this enumeration of error is waived.4
3.The trial court judge administered the following oath to the jury:
Do each of you solemnly swear or affirm, now that you have been selected as jurors in this case, that you will listen carefully to all the evidence presented to you, and apply the law that I give you at the end of the case to the facts as you find them to be?If so, please say "I do."
This oath deviated from the prescribed language of OCGA § 15-12-139, which states that:
In all criminal cases, the following oath shall be administered to the trial jury:
Appellant did not object to the oath given at trial, but on appeal claims that because the oath failed to require the jury to return a "true verdict," his guilty verdict should be set aside.
A criminal defendant may not waive the trial court's complete failure to administer an oath to the jury.5However, where the oath given by the trial court deviates from the one statutorily prescribed, an accused is required to raise an objection, and acquiescence to the oath until after the verdict is returned results in a waiver of the objection on appeal.6It follows in this matter that appellant's claim of error regarding the oath given to the jury is waived.
4.Appellant argues that the trial court erred in admitting Rideaux's videotaped statement to police, made shortly after the crimes occurred, into evidence under the necessity exception to the hearsay rule.In order to introduce any hearsay statement under the necessity exception, (1) the declarant must be unavailable to testify; (2) there must be particularized guarantees of the statement's trustworthiness; and (3) the statement must be both relevant to a material fact and more probative regarding that fact than any other evidence concerning appellant's motive for the crimes.7Appellant urges that because these three criteria were not established before the trial court, Rideaux's taped statement should not have been admitted under the necessity exception.As explained below, we agree.
Having reviewed the transcript, we believe that the State established that Rideaux was unavailable to testify, as he could not be located despite a diligent search by the authorities, was officially listed as a missing person at the time of trial, and was variously reported to be either dead or having fled the state and gone into hiding.8
However, the State failed to establish that particularized guarantees of trustworthiness existed so that Rideaux's statement to police could be deemed credible enough to warrant its admission without subjecting Rideaux to cross-examination.9Merely because Rideaux made his statement to police within hours of the shooting and never recanted or contradicted his statement does not, standing alone, demonstrate that the statement was sufficiently trustworthy to warrant its admission under the necessity exception.Only where "the declarant's truthfulness is so clear from the surrounding circumstances that the test of cross examination would be of marginal utility" does the hearsay rule not bar admission of a hearsay statement at trial.10
Furthermore, having reviewed the videotape of Rideaux's brief statement and compared it to the transcripted trial testimony of other witnesses, we conclude that while Rideaux's statement certainly was relevant, as it detailed his observations of the crimes' commission, the statement was no more probative on the issues discussed therein than the testimony of at least three other individuals who were in the apartment when appellant committed his crimes. 11Rideaux told police what he had heard and seen on that night, and also told police about his earlier fist fight with appellant, which apparently motivated appellant's attack.However, the same facts recounted by Rideaux in his videotaped statement were also recounted by witnesses Veasy, Jones and Huff, and Rideaux made no relevant comments in his statement that were not also testified to by these three other witnesses.
The criteria for admission of hearsay evidence under the necessity exception are not mere niceties.Unless a party moving for a hearsay statement's admission comes forward and establishes that all three criteria are clearly satisfied, the trial court must deny admission and the prohibition against hearsay evidence must be upheld.In this case, the State altogether failed to establish two of the three criteria necessary to warrant the admission of Rideaux's videotaped statement under the necessity exception to the rule against hearsay.Therefore, the trial court erred by allowing the videotape to be played for the jury.
Nonetheless, as explained, Rideaux's statement was cumulative of other evidence that was properly introduced at appellant's trial.Because the erroneous admission of hearsay testimony under the necessity exception is harmless where there is other evidence proving the substance of the hearsay,12 the improper admission of Rideaux's statement does not require that we reverse appellant's conviction.
5.Appellant claims the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by calling the victim's mother to the stand, where she became emotional while identifying a photograph of the victim taken while he was alive.Appellant did not raise this objection at trial, however, and it is therefore waived on appeal.13
6.At trial, appellant's mother testified that appellant lived in California and that, after visiting her in Atlanta the week before the murder, he returned there.Another purported alibi witness, Smith, who was appellant's employer in California, failed to appear at trial.However, an FBI agent testified on cross-examination that while being interviewed, Smith stated that appellant's mother had asked Smith to say that appellant was at work at the time of the shooting when, in fact, he was not.Appellant claims that the trial court erred by allowing the State to use this hearsay testimony to impeach a non-testifying witness, Smith.We disagree.Appellant elicited the testimony complained of by asking the FBI agent whether Smith told him that appellant was in California at the time of the killing.Appellant cannot purposefully elicit testimony at trial, and then claim on appeal that the trial court erred in admitting that same testimony.14
7.Appellant urges that the trial court erred by charging the jury that the intent to kill may be presumed from the customary use of a deadly weapon.This charge was expressly disapproved by us in Harris v. State.15However, appellant neither objected to this charge at trial nor reserved objections to the overall charge.Accordingly, this enumeration is waived on appeal.16
8.After the jury returned its guilty verdicts and before imposing sentence, the trial judge stated that she was scheduled to speak at the victim's high school, and that she did not learn that the victim attended that particular school until halfway through the trial.She then stated that:
[T]his trial will be heavy on my heart as I address [the victim's] classmates and seek to make sure that the individuals that are in the audience of the address will do all they can to make sure that they are not the victim of a crime or find themselves, as [appellant] does, convicted of the charges of murder.
After imposing a life sentence on appellant, the judge stated that she hopes appellant will not "see the outside of the prison system during [his] lifetime," and that she intends to actively...
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Al-Amin v. State
...would be of marginal utility" does the hearsay rule not bar admission of a hearsay statement at trial. Phillips v. State, 275 Ga. 595, 597(4), 571 S.E.2d 361 (2002). The same rule applies when a defendant is the proponent of the hearsay. Turner v. State, 267 Ga. 149(3), 476 S.E.2d 252 The t......
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Blake v. State
...made by the trial judge during the course of the two hearings conducted for purposes of resentencing. See Phillips v. State, 275 Ga. 595, 599(8), 571 S.E.2d 361 (2002) (noting that trial judge's comment during sentencing that case "will be heavy on my heart" could not be viewed in isolation......
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Taylor v. State
...hearsay exceptions, and the moving party has the burden of establishing that one of the exceptions applies. See Phillips v. State , 275 Ga. 595, 598, 571 S.E.2d 361 (2002). The State has not identified such an exception. The other police officer's report that Officer Hewitt relied upon does......
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10 Evidence and Handling Witnesses
...to establish that the statement is relevant to a material fact and is more probative of that fact than other available evidence [Phillips, 275 Ga. 595, 571 SE2d 361 (2002); Clark,271 Ga. 6, 5, 515 SE2d 155 (1999)]. AND f. The proponent of the statement provides pre-trial notice to the adver......
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10 Evidence and Witnesses
...to establish that the statement is relevant to a material fact and is more probative of that fact than other available evidence [Phillips, 275 Ga. 595, 571 SE2d 361 (2002); Clark,271 Ga. 6, 5, 515 SE2d 155 (1999)]. AND f. The proponent of the statement provides pre-trial notice to the adver......
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10 Evidence and Handling Witnesses
...to establish that the statement is relevant to a material fact and is more probative of that fact than other available evidence [Phillips, 275 Ga. 595, 571 SE2d 361 (2002); Clark,271 Ga. 6, 5, 515 SE2d 155 (1999)]. AND f. The proponent of the statement provides pre-trial notice to the adver......
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10 Evidence and Handling Witnesses
...to establish that the statement is relevant to a material fact and is more probative of that fact than other available evidence [Phillips, 275 Ga. 595, 571 SE2d 361 (2002); Clark,271 Ga. 6, 5, 515 SE2d 155 (1999)]. AND f. The proponent of the statement provides pre-trial notice to the adver......