Bailee M. Childers v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 2021
DocketA20A1626
StatusPublished

This text of Bailee M. Childers v. State (Bailee M. Childers v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailee M. Childers v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION BARNES, P. J., GOBEIL and PIPKIN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.

February 25, 2021

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A20A1626. CHILDERS v. THE STATE.

GOBEIL, Judge.

Following a bench trial, Bailee Childers was convicted of a single

misdemeanor count of furnishing a vapor product to a minor. Childers appeals,

arguing: (1) the trial court erred in admitting the product label as an exception to the

rule against hearsay; and (2) there was insufficient evidence to sustain her conviction.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

“Upon a finding of guilt following a bench trial, the presumption of innocence

no longer applies, and on appeal, the appellate court construes the evidence in favor

of the judge’s findings of fact.” Mason v. State, 353 Ga. App. 404, 408 (3) (837 SE2d

711) (2020) (citation and punctuation omitted). So viewed, the evidence shows that

during the summer of 2019, the Cherokee County Marshall’s Office conducted a county-wide “Vape Product Underage Sales Compliance Check” (the “Operation”).

The general objectives of the Operation were to conduct compliance inspections at

retail establishments located in Cherokee County, and arrest or obtain warrants for

individuals selling any vapor product to minors. Each team in the Operation was

assigned at least one underage operative.

As relevant here, on July 25, 2019, Sergeant Mary Turner of the Canton Police

Department was assigned as the lead law enforcement officer of Team 5 of the

Operation. Team 5 was tasked to conduct a compliance check at the OLE 5 Vapor

store located at 4047 Marietta Highway, Suite 100A, Canton, Georgia (the “Store”).

Two high school students, J. D. and A. Z., both aged 16 at the time, served as the

underage operatives for Team 5. As part of the Operation, J. D. and A. Z. entered the

Store and purchased a bottle containing a mango flavored nicotine salt. The store

clerk, Childers, did not ask for proof of age from either of the two operatives. After

completing the transaction, J. D. and A. Z. exited the store and provided the unopened

product to Officer Luis Salas, who in turn photographed the evidence.

2 Sergeant Turner then entered the store and spoke to Childers, who was the only

person inside the store at the time.1 When questioned by Turner, Childers never

denied that she sold the nicotine salt to J. D. and A. Z.; rather Childers maintained

that she did not know that they were underage.

Thereafter, Childers was charged by accusation with one count of furnishing

a vapor product to a minor, in violation of OCGA § 16-12-171 (a) (1) (A). On the day

of trial, Childers filed a motion in limine, (1) seeking to prevent the State’s witnesses

from opining or otherwise referring “to the contents of a certain bottle of apparent

liquid seized as a ‘vapor product’ or as containing nicotine”; and (2) arguing that the

label on the bottle, which identified the contents as “nicotine salt,” constituted

inadmissible hearsay.

At trial, Childers objected to Sergeant Turner answering a question about the

type of product that the minors had purchased from Childers as part of the Operation.

Both sides then presented argument on Childers’s motion in limine, but the trial court

reserved its ruling until the close of evidence. The court later permitted the State to

enter into evidence a photograph of the product that Childers sold to the two underage

1 Both J. D. and A. Z. identified Childers as the store employee who had sold them the product.

3 operatives, including its label, subject to Childers’s earlier hearsay objection. The

label identified the product as a “RAM Top-Off 45 MG nicotine salt bottle,” as well

as an “e-cig liquid or fluid.”2

At the close of evidence, the trial court orally denied Childers’s motion, finding

that the bottle’s label — which clearly denoted the product as a nicotine product to

be used in e-cigarettes and not sold to individuals under the age of 21 — was

admissible under OCGA § 24-8-803.3 Immediately thereafter, the court found

Childers guilty as charged, and sentenced her to a term of 12 months to be served on

probation. The instant appeal followed.

1. Childers asserts that the trial court erred in ruling that the product’s label fell

within an exception to the rule against hearsay. She contends that absent the

admission of the product’s label, the trial court would not have found her guilty of the

charged offense.

2 The copy of Exhibit 5 submitted with the record on appeal is dark and largely unreadable. Nevertheless, Childers concedes in her brief that the “label contained the terms ‘[n]icotine salt,’ ‘addictive,’ ‘nic salt e-liquid,’ and a warning that this ‘product contains nicotine, nicotine is an addictive chemical.’” 3 The trial court’s ruling does not specify the subsection of OCGA § 24-8-803 under which it found the label admissible as an exception to the rule against hearsay.

4 The parties do not dispute that the label on the product is hearsay offered to

prove that the bottle contained a vapor product. Rather, the parties dispute whether

the label was admissible under an exception to the rule against hearsay. As explained

below, we conclude that even assuming the trial court erred, any such error was

harmless.

(a) First, although the trial court did not specify under which subsection of

OCGA § 24-8-803 it admitted the label as an exception to the rule against hearsay,

we conclude that the court admitted the label under the “market-reports-and-

commercial-publications” exception contained in OCGA § 24-8-803 (17) for the

reasons that follow.

In its oral ruling on Childers’s motion in limine, the court explained:

As to the hearsay objection. . . Judge Pope in [the Ledford v. State, 239 Ga. App. 237 (520 SE2d 225) (1999) (physical precedent only)4] case

4 In Ledford, the defendant, who acknowledged “huffing” paint from a spray can, was charged under OCGA § 16-13-91 with inhaling “paint containing acetone and toluene.” 239 Ga. App. at 237-238. That Code section prohibits, for the purpose of causing, inter alia, intoxication, “intentionally smell[ing] or inhal[ing] the fumes from any model glue[.]” OCGA § 16-13-91. In OCGA § 16-13-90

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Bailee M. Childers v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailee-m-childers-v-state-gactapp-2021.