Porter v. State
Decision Date | 16 January 1997 |
Docket Number | No. A96A2487,A96A2487 |
Citation | 480 S.E.2d 291,224 Ga.App. 276 |
Parties | , 97 FCDR 168 PORTER v. The STATE. |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
Steinberg & Vrono, Charles J. Vrono, Forest Park, for appellant.
Robert E. Keller, District Attorney, Brian J. Amero, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
Defendant was charged in an indictment in Count 1 with "CRIMINAL ATTEMPT--THEFT BY TAKING MOTOR VEHICLE," in that he "enter[ed] a 1987 Cadillac, a motor vehicle, property of Shervan Lee Wilson, and [broke] the steering column of said vehicle[.]" Defendant was further charged in Count 2 with "OBSTRUCTION OF AN OFFICER," in that he fled from arrest. At defendant's jury trial, Ray Earl Carter testified that about 1:00 a.m. on September 20, 1995, as he was watching the news on television, he observed a brown Cadillac automobile slowly cruise up and down the street in front of his apartment. "And then when it got to this end [of the street] down here, [he] saw it turn the lights out and come back up this street here and park." Mr. Carter then "One was a male, ... about 6'1". The other was a male, ... about 5'10" ... They started walking down towards building G. When they got to building G, they stopped in front of a car which was a Cadillac, a white Eldorado Cadillac." "When they got to that car, they started turning and looking around like they were trying to find out if somebody was watching them." Mr. Carter "saw them get inside the Cadillac, which he knew the owner." "The 6'1" ... gentleman got on the driver's side. The 5'10" ... gentleman got on the passenger's side." Mr. Carter is The two men were inside the car "[t]hree to five minutes." In response to Mr. Carter's call to 9-1-1, two units from the Clayton County Police came to the scene. As the police pulled up to the white car, Mr. Carter "saw the two gentlemen exit the car on each side and run through the breezeway...."
Officer David Brian Hardwick, a Clayton County police officer, "and Officer Smithwick were dispatched [in separate cars] to Lake of the Woods apartments on a call of ... entering auto in progress or a theft of auto in progress." "The one on the driver's side of the vehicle was the tallest." A "helicopter came over and was searching once [the police] had the perimeter set up." Officer Hardwick identified defendant as "[t]he person [he] saw when [that person] popped out of the driver's side of the vehicle...." Defendant was also identified as that "person [Officer Hardwick] found ... in the woods...." Once In Officer Hardwick's experience,
Shervan Lee Wilson, the owner of a white and gold 1987 Cadillac Eldorado, testified that on the evening of September 19, 1995, his car doors "were locked." When he next examined the car, he "noticed that the steering column was broke." Officer Alan Edward Smithwick of the Clayton County Police Department "saw Officer Hardwick enter the breezeway following two ... males...." He affirmed that "the people [he and Officer Hardwick] arrested fit the description of the people [they had] chased...." Officer Smithwick "recognize[d] [defendant as] the person that Officer Hardwick took down[.]"
Faheem Ameer Reed was called as a defense witness and admitted persuading defendant to drive him to that particular apartment complex. Faheem Ameer Reed "[n]ever [told defendant] that he [was] planning on stealing the car[; rather, ... Faheem Ameer Reed] was lying to [defendant] the whole time about this just so that [defendant] would take [him] to the apartments." Defendant took the stand and denied any knowing involvement in his companion's attempted theft of the vehicle. He confirmed that, as the police approached, they Defendant was Defendant further conceded:
The jury found defendant guilty of both charges and he was sentenced to serve ten years as to Count 1 and a concurrent twelve months to serve as to Count 2. His motion for new trial was denied and this appeal followed. Held:
1. Defendant's second enumeration contends the trial court erred "in re-opening the State's case...."
In this regard, the record shows that Officer Smithwick failed to abide by a subpoena to appear and testify at trial. At the close of the first day of trial, on April 3, 1996, the State "rest[ed]." But the trial court announced it would
(a) The State argues in reply that defendant waived any valid exception to reopening the prosecution's case, because he failed to make a contemporaneous exception to the trial court's sua sponte ruling. This argument was previously considered by the whole court and found to be without merit. Ford v. State, 200 Ga.App. 376, 408 S.E.2d 166.
(b) King v. State, 230 Ga. 581, 582(3), 198 S.E.2d 305. In Burden v. State, 182 Ga. 533, 534(3), 186 S.E. 555, the Supreme Court of Georgia unanimously held it was within the discretionary authority of the trial court to reopen the case and allow the State to introduce further testimony, even though such testimony was not in rebuttal of evidence offered by the...
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