Brinkley v. State

728 S.E.2d 598, 291 Ga. 195, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 1894, 2012 WL 2217049, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 18, 2012
DocketS12A0137
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 728 S.E.2d 598 (Brinkley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinkley v. State, 728 S.E.2d 598, 291 Ga. 195, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 1894, 2012 WL 2217049, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 568 (Ga. 2012).

Opinions

Nahmias, Justice.

On January 27,2000, Appellant Jonas Brinkley was found guilty by a Tift County jury of kidnapping with bodily injury to a female victim, rape of the female victim, kidnapping a male victim, and armed robbery. Six days later, Appellant was sentenced to the mandatory minimum of life imprisonment (with the possibility of parole) on the kidnapping with bodily injury count. See OCGA § 16-5-40 (d) (4) (“Aperson convicted of the offense of kidnapping shall be punished by . .. [l]ife imprisonment or death if the person kidnapped received bodily injury.). The trial court also sentenced Appellant to serve 20 consecutive years in prison on the kidnapping charge and 20 concurrent years for the armed robbery; the rape charge merged into the conviction for kidnapping with bodily injury. On February 8, 2000, Appellant filed, through his trial counsel, a motion for new trial on the general grounds. Regrettably, Appellant’s case then was shuffled among several defense lawyers for almost a decade, with little progress made on the pending new trial motion. See Shank v. State, 290 Ga. 844, 849 (725 SE2d 246) (2012) (expressing this Court’s concern about inordinate delay in post-trial proceedings and calling on “trial courts and prosecutors [,] as well as defense counsel and [196]*196defendants, to ensure that the appropriate post-conviction motions are filed, litigated, and decided without unnecessary delay”).

After Appellant’s current counsel took over his representation, however, he filed an amended motion for new trial on April 29, 2010. Among other claims, the amended motion raised, for the first time, a claim that Appellant’s life sentence for kidnapping with bodily injury violated the cruel and unusual punishments clause of the Georgia Constitution, see Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XVII, because he was a juvenile age 14 at the time of the crime. The trial court held a hearing on the amended motion on September 14, 2010, and denied the motion on the merits on February 25, 2011.

Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal in this Court, contending that we have jurisdiction because the case involves at least one novel constitutional question. See Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. VI, Par. II (1) (providing that the Supreme Court shall have “exclusive appellate jurisdiction” in “[a] 11 cases involving the construction of... the Constitution of the State of Georgia or of the United States and all cases in which the constitutionality of a law . . . has been drawn in question”). See also City of Decatur v. DeKalb County, 284 Ga. 434, 436-437 (668 SE2d 247) (2008) (explaining that we have interpreted this jurisdictional provision to extend only to constitutional issues that were distinctly ruled on by the trial court and that do not involve the application of unquestioned and unambiguous constitutional provisions or challenges to laws previously held to be constitutional against the same attack). However, because Appellant’s cruel and unusual punishment claim was not timely raised in the trial court, review of its merits has been waived on appeal, and so it does not invoke our constitutional question jurisdiction. His other constitutional claims are not novel, and because no other basis for this Court’s jurisdiction appears to exist, we must transfer this case to the Court of Appeals.

1. The first opportunity a defendant has to bring a constitutional attack against a sentencing statute, as opposed to other types of statutes, may come only after the guilty verdict is returned and the sentencing issue becomes ripe. See Jones v. State, 290 Ga. 670, 674 (725 SE2d 236) (2012). Nevertheless, as this Court recently and unanimously reiterated, “our longstanding general rule [is] that even constitutional challenges to sentencing statutes, including those challenges based on the Eighth Amendment, are untimely if they are presented for the first time in a motion for new trial.” Id. (citing cases from this Court and cases showing that “[t]he Court of Appeals consistently adheres to the same rule”). As far back as 1926, this

[197]*197Court held squarely that

[a] complaint that a sentence imposes upon a defendant a cruel and inhuman punishment, in violation of the [state and federal] constitutional provision^], can not properly be made a ground of a motion for new trial. Such objection to the sentence can only be taken by a proper timely and direct exception to the sentence.

Gore v. State, 162 Ga. 267, 276 (134 SE 36) (1926) (citations omitted).

Appellant was 14 years old when he committed his crimes, and the statute under which he was sentenced imposes a mandatory minimum sentence of life imprisonment, see OCGA§ 16-5-40 (d) (4), so once he was found guilty of kidnapping with bodily injury, that was the sentence he would receive. Thus, if Appellant wanted to argue that OCGA § 16-5-40 (d) (4) imposes cruel and unusual punishment, as applied to him or to all juveniles, he had the opportunity to raise that constitutional challenge to the statute at his sentencinghearing; he simply failed to do so. Consequently, the trial court should have ruled that Appellant’s cruel and unusual punishment claim was untimely when first raised in his amended motion for new trial, and he has waived review of the merits of that constitutional issue on appeal.

The dissent acknowledges that this constitutional challenge was untimely but would overlook that procedural default on the ground that Appellant’s argument has been strengthened, although not endorsed, by developments in Eighth Amendment case law related to juvenile sentencing during the years since his sentencing. However, like Appellant, the dissent cites no authority for our excusing a procedural default on a constitutional issue in order to consider making new law on that issue on direct appeal. Compare Humphrey v. Wilson, 282 Ga. 520, 524 (652 SE2d 501) (2007) (considering, on habeas corpus review, a new cruel and unusual punishment claim based on a statute enacted after Wilson’s conviction, but only after holding that Wilson had “not fail[ed] to comply with any Georgia procedural rules on appeal”).1

[198]*1982. This Court has also repeatedly held that an improperly presented constitutional claim does not bring a case within our appellate jurisdiction and, where the case did not come within our jurisdiction for some other reason and where we actually addressed the jurisdictional issue, we have consistently transferred such cases to the Court of Appeals for decision on any remaining enumerations of error. See Perez-Castillo v. State, 275 Ga. 124, 124-125 (562 SE2d 184) (2002) (holding that, when constitutional issues were not timely raised, “those challenges must be deemed waived on appeal” and, absent some other basis for this Court’s jurisdiction, the appeal must be transferred to the Court of Appeals); Hardeman v. State, 272 Ga. 361, 361-362 (529 SE2d 368) (2000) (same); Gainey v. State, 232 Ga.

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Bluebook (online)
728 S.E.2d 598, 291 Ga. 195, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 1894, 2012 WL 2217049, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkley-v-state-ga-2012.