Carl Neil Morey v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 4, 2026
DocketA26A0245
StatusPublished

This text of Carl Neil Morey v. State (Carl Neil Morey 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
Carl Neil Morey v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., WATKINS and PADGETT, 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

June 4, 2026

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A26A0245. MOREY v. THE STATE.

MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.

After a jury trial, Carl Morey was convicted of the theft by taking of currency

from Cordele Metal Works, Inc., for which his construction business worked as a

subcontractor. The state’s evidence showed that, with the assistance of Cordele Metal

Works project manager Clint Musselwhite, he inflated his invoices.

The trial court denied Morey’s motion for new trial. On appeal, he argues that

he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel, but he has not shown both deficient

performance and prejudice. He also argues that the trial court erred in allowing the

state to present victim-impact evidence in the guilt/innocence phase of his trial, but he has not shown harmful error. He also has not shown cumulative error. So we affirm.

1. Facts and procedural posture

Because Morey does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting

his convictions, “we review only the evidence presented at trial that is relevant to [his]

enumerations of error and any factual background needed to provide context for

them.” Eaker v. State, 315 Ga. 202, 203(1) (881 SE2d 673) (2022).

The trial evidence showed that Morey’s construction business worked as a

subcontractor for Cordele Metal Works, the victim in this case. Cordele Metal Works,

a sheet metal fabrication company, was one of two family businesses owned by Joe

Cook. Joe Cook’s son, Mac Cook, was the president of the other family business and

a shareholder of Cordele Metal Works.

In 2008, Cordele Metal Works purchased the assets of a business that

specialized in the fabrication and installation of metal stairs and handrails in buildings.

The former owner of that business, Clint Musselwhite, was a lifelong friend of Mac

Cook and became a full-time employee of Cordele Metal Works managing projects

involving metal stairs and handrails. Musselwhite used Morey as the exclusive

subcontractor for the vast majority of those projects.

2 Cordele Metal Works paid Morey for his work on the projects using a tool

called a “schedule of values.” The schedule of values was a chart, created by either

Musselwhite or, later, an estimator employed by Cordele Metals Works, that assigned

dollar values to the work to be done on a job Cordele Metal Works’s then-general

manager, Don Barnes,1 would use the schedule of values as a reference when

approving Morey’s invoices, which Morey submitted to Musselwhite. Barnes testified

that he performed a “cursory check” of the invoices but that he had only a limited

knowledge of the work actually performed and trusted that the work was as

represented on the invoices.

In 2020, Joe Cook asked Mac Cook to look into losses at Cordele Metal Works.

In Joe Cook’s words, the company was “not making money when it should have” and

was losing money on big jobs. Before that point, the Cooks had taken a hands-off

approach to managing Cordele Metal Works for several reasons: Joe Cook was limited

by a serious medical condition (he suffered from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or

ALS); the Cooks trusted the management team in place at Cordele Metal Works; and

1 Cordele Metal Works subsequently demoted Barnes. 3 they specifically relied on Musselwhite’s experience in the stairs and handrails

industry, experience that they themselves did not have.

Mac Cook’s investigation into the losses uncovered concerns about

Musselwhite, including Musselwhite’s refusal to allow access to paperwork regarding

contracts and the cost of jobs that would permit oversight. In early May 2020, Mac

Cook fired Musselwhite. He asked Musselwhite to hand over his company-owned

cellphone, but Musselwhite refused and left the premises with the phone. After Mac

Cook reached out to law enforcement, Musselwhite returned the phone, but its

contents had been erased in a “factory reset.” Cordele Metals Works gave both that

phone and another company-owned phone found in Musselwhite’s desk to law

enforcement, which used a forensic process to extract the contents of the phones,

including text messages.

Some of the text messages retrieved from the phones indicated that

Musselwhite and Morey had worked together to inflate Morey’s invoices for

subcontracting work and then give Musselwhite a portion of the amount that Cordele

Metal Works paid Morey for that work. Examples of the text messages include:

4 • A May 31, 2018, text from Musselwhite to Morey, “I’ve got you down for

$26,104 and $5,000 for myself. Don [Barnes, Cordele Metal Works’s general

manager] will have it in a few minutes so just be prepared for anything ok.”

• A June 29, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “Did you put any extra for

me in yesterday? Monday I owe the dentist $1,647,” to which Morey

responded, “Total will be 1000.”

• An October 17, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “[I]f you see anything

where we both can make extra money I need it,” to which Morey responded,

“Ok.”

• An October 19, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “Me & [Don Barnes]

had a long discussion this morning that got a little awkward. I got you’re [sic]

number up to over $45,000 this week but I fudged $5,000 for myself. All 3 of

them freaked out when they saw how much it all was.”

• An October 26, 2018 text from Morey to Musselwhite, “I need to get numbers

from u so I can do invoices.”

5 • A November 7, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “I got you down for

$29,041[.] I got $4,000 in for myself[.] As long as it all passes Don’s

inspection,” to which Morey responded, “Ok.”

• A November 16, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “Are the guys done in

Louisville? I was going to try and squeeze about $2,000 in that one for myself,”

to which Morey responded affirmatively, and then Musselwhite responded,

“Ok. I’m going to put that 2k in for me then if you don’t mind telling

Frances,” to which Morey responded “Ok. ...”

• A November 21, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “As your 5th man in

eufaula last week I put in $2,750 for myself,” to which Morey responded,

• A December 13, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “I’m sinning again.

You’re [sic] check will be $28,086. I put in $3,000 for me.”

• A December 21, 2018 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “If they ask, you got

5 guys over there and not 4. I’m trying to get me a $1,000 for my trip next

week,” to which Morey responded, “Ok.”

6 • A January 11, 2019 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “I added $50,000 to your

Theory West numbers. Don ain’t see it yet so let’s see what happens. $25,901

is what I got you in for today. I put $2,500 for myself but if you need to be as

close to $25,000 as you can I’ll change mine to $1,000,” to which Morey

responded with a “thumbs up” emoji, and then Musselwhite responded, “Or

if you wanta do $5k I’ll take that [thumbs up].”

• A January 24, 2019 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “I added a few hours to

DR Phillips so I could get an extra $500,” to which Morey responded, “K.”

• A January 31, 2019 text from Musselwhite to Morey, “$43,445. If I’m worker

number 5 that’s $4,090.

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Carl Neil Morey v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carl-neil-morey-v-state-gactapp-2026.