State v. Enich

Decision Date05 July 2016
Docket NumberA16A0550
PartiesThe State v. Enich.
CourtGeorgia Court of Appeals

Andrew J. Ekonomou, Atlanta, Jacquelyn Lee Johnson, for Appellant.

Earle Johnston Duncan III, for Appellee.

Boggs

, Judge.

The State appeals from the trial court's order granting Eugene Enich's motion for new trial on the ground that Enich should have been allowed to impeach a prosecution witness with evidence of her pending first offender probation. The State contends that a new trial should not have been granted because the evidence was properly excluded at trial, and that in any event the error was harmless. We find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the excluded evidence should have been admitted to show the witness' bias, and that the underlying error was not harmless. We therefore affirm the grant of a new trial.

Enich was tried and convicted of two counts of rape and two counts of child molestation. The evidence presented at trial showed that, in 2009, Enich, who is mentally challenged,1 moved in with the victim and the victim's mother, who was designated the payee on Enich's Social Security disability benefits. She received a lump sum of approximately $2,000, and monthly payments of between $400 and $700 thereafter. At some point, Enich's case was reevaluated and the payments stopped. A witness testified that Enich and the mother had a falling out in early 2010, and Enich called the witness to come pick him up; the mother called the witness and told her that Enich had accused her of “getting his assistance.” A few days later, after Enich returned to the mother's house, he was charged with rape and child molestation after the mother called the police and told them Enich had tried to rape her daughter. The mother acknowledged that she and Enich had quarreled regarding her using some of his benefits to purchase her car, and she acknowledged that she was having financial difficulties, although she denied that “it cause[d] issues around the house.”

During the trial, the trial court refused to allow Enich to introduce evidence that the victim's mother was serving a first offender probation for forgery and theft by receiving. The trial court acknowledged that Enich was entitled to introduce evidence of an ulterior motive or that the witness was attempting to “punish[ ] Enich by causing her daughter to accuse him, but ruled that he could not use her first offender status to do so.

Enich made a proffer at trial that in late 2009, the mother was in significant financial difficulties, and allegedly possessed stolen property, passed forged checks, and applied for credit in the name of others in September, October, and November of 2009. On May 19, 2011, the mother was charged by accusation with two counts of forgery in the first degree, identity fraud, and theft by receiving stolen property, arising out of the 2009 incidents. On August 5, 2011, she pleaded guilty to one count of forgery and theft by receiving, and on August 30, 2011, she was sentenced to five years of probation under the First Offender Act. Enich's trial took place in mid–October of 2011.

Enich's amended motion for new trial was heard after the reassignment of the case to a successor judge. At the hearing on the motion, the successor judge received evidence regarding Enich's competence2 and heard testimony from Enich regarding the handling of his case. Enich's trial counsel also testified at length with regard to their preparations for trial and their theory of the case. They believed that when Enich accused the witness of stealing his benefits, she immediately pursued the charges against him in order to divert the State's attention from Enich's accusation and to avoid possible revocation of her first offender status for committing an additional theft “because rape is a louder word than theft.”

In its order granting a new trial, the trial court concluded that Enich should have been allowed to present evidence of the mother's pending first offender sentence, because it showed bias in that she had a motive “to punish [the] accused or eliminate his ability to cause [her] trouble in the future” by inducing her child to accuse him. The court reasoned that if the jury had been made aware of the mother's criminal conduct “which involved misappropriation of the funds of others” it could have created a reasonable doubt as to Enich's guilt.

1. We first consider the appropriate standard of review.3 [T]he first grant of a new trial on special grounds involving a question of law is reviewable in a proper appeal.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) O'Neal v. State , 285 Ga. 361, 363, 677 S.E.2d 90 (2009)

.

Where, as here, an appeal from the grant or denial of a motion for a new trial involves a mixed question of law and fact, we employ two different standards of review. We review de novo the trial court's decision as to any questions of law, while applying the clearly erroneous standard of review to any factual findings made by that court. In Georgia, it is well-settled that the “clearly erroneous” standard for reviewing findings of fact is equivalent to the highly deferential “any evidence” test. Thus, we will uphold the trial court's factual findings if there is any evidence to support them, and we defer to the trial court's credibility determinations.

(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Wedel v. State , 328 Ga.App. 28, 761 S.E.2d 454 (2014)

(right of defendant to be present). Compare State v. Oliver , 326 Ga.App. 759, 761–762, 755 S.E.2d 293 (2014) (when substitute trial judge treats evidentiary question as “purely legal issue, and he did not receive any evidence or make any findings of fact,” de novo standard applies.) Here, the successor judge heard testimony from trial counsel and from Enich himself, and made findings of fact. We therefore apply the dual standard of review as outlined in Wedel.

2. With this standard in mind, we turn to the issue presented here.

The successful completion of probation as a first offender shall not be considered a criminal conviction and cannot be used to impeach a witness on general credibility grounds. Because first offender status is not considered an adjudication of guilt, a witness also may not be impeached on general credibility grounds with a first offender sentence that is currently being served. When the impeachment is to show bias, however, we have previously held that the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment permits a defendant in a criminal case to cross-examine witnesses about their first offender status. The Sixth Amendment right of confrontation is not absolute, and trial courts retain broad discretion to impose reasonable limits on cross-examination to avoid harassment, prejudice, confusion, repetition, or irrelevant evidence.

(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Sanders v. State , 290 Ga. 445, 446, 721 S.E.2d 834 (2012)

. See also Melson v. State , 263 Ga.App. 647, 648, 588 S.E.2d 822 (2003).

By means of such cross-examination, the defendant is entitled to attack the credibility of the witness by showing that the pending charges reveal a possible bias, prejudice, or ulterior motive on the part of the witness to give untruthful or shaded testimony in an effort to please the State. Whether the witness is testifying pursuant to a deal with the State relating to the pending charges is not crucial to the right to conduct such cross-examination. Rather, the defendant is entitled to show by cross-examination that the witness may be shading his testimony in an effort to curry favor from the State. A desire to cooperate may be formed beneath the conscious level, in a manner not apparent even to the witness, but such a subtle desire to assist the State nevertheless may cloud perception.

(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Scott v. State , 242 Ga.App. 850, 851–852, 527 S.E.2d 210 (1999)

(first offender probation), citing Hines v. State , 249 Ga. 257, 260, 290 S.E.2d 911 (1982) (pending criminal charges). “While evidence about the plea was inadmissible for impeachment purposes, it was admissible to show potential bias in favor of the [S]tate while the victim was still on probation under that plea.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Christopher v. State , 314 Ga.App. 809, 814, 726 S.E.2d 411 (2012)

(physical precedent only). And when a trial court “cut[s] off in limine all inquiry on a subject with respect to which the defense was entitled to a reasonable cross-examination” it is “an abuse of discretion and prejudicial error.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Hines , supra, 249 Ga. at 260 (2), 290 S.E.2d 911.

We note that, in the context of an unsuccessful claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we have suggested that potential impeachment for bias is limited to cases in which “the witness may have received special, first offender treatment in exchange for testimony favorable to the State.”

Crapps v. State , 329 Ga.App. 820, 829 (3) (c), 766 S.E.2d 178 (2014)

.4 But this statement was dicta, because in Crapps we concluded that any attempt to impeach the witness would have been merely on general credibility grounds, not to show bias, prejudice, or ulterior motive, and that counsel was not ineffective in failing to proffer such inadmissible evidence. Id. In so concluding, we cited Jackson v. State , 316 Ga.App. 588, 593–59 (4), 730 S.E.2d 69 (2012), in which we also found that the trial court correctly excluded evidence of a witness' first offender plea because appellant had only attempted to impeach on general credibility grounds.5

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