Clark v. State

847 S.E.2d 160, 309 Ga. 566
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 10, 2020
DocketS20A1021
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 847 S.E.2d 160 (Clark 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
Clark v. State, 847 S.E.2d 160, 309 Ga. 566 (Ga. 2020).

Opinion

FINAL COPY 309 Ga. 566

S20A1021. CLARK v. THE STATE.

WARREN, Justice.

A jury convicted Jennifer Clark of malice murder and other

crimes in connection with the death of Donald Clark.1 On appeal,

Clark contends that her trial counsel rendered constitutionally

1 The crimes occurred on the morning of November 18, 2008. A Lamar County grand jury indicted Jennifer Clark and Michael Yost for malice murder, felony murder predicated on aggravated assault, five counts of aggravated assault, one count of aggravated battery, one count of concealing the death of another, and one count of tampering with evidence. Clark alone was also indicted on two counts of cruelty to children in the first degree. The State nolle prossed the aggravated battery count and four of the aggravated assault counts. Yost entered a negotiated plea of guilty to malice murder, concealing the death of another, and tampering with evidence in exchange for a promise to testify truthfully at Clark’s trial. Clark was tried from January 31 to February 4, 2011, and a jury found her guilty of all counts. The trial court sentenced Clark to life in prison for malice murder, ten years consecutive for concealing the death of another, ten years consecutive for tampering with evidence, and twenty years consecutive for the two counts of cruelty to children in the first degree. The remaining counts were merged for sentencing purposes or vacated by operation of law. On March 15, 2012, Clark filed a motion for an out-of-time appeal through new counsel, which the trial court granted. Clark later filed a second motion for an out-of-time appeal, which the trial court also granted. On May 29, 2012, Clark filed a motion for a new trial, which she later amended. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion for a new trial, as amended, on February 7, 2020. Clark timely filed a notice of appeal on February 18, 2020, and the case was docketed in this Court for the April 2020 term and submitted for a decision on the briefs. ineffective assistance by failing to request that the jury be instructed

that it could consider Michael Yost’s felony convictions in assessing

his credibility. Because Clark has failed to demonstrate that she

was prejudiced by her trial counsel’s alleged deficient performance,

we affirm.

1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdicts,

the evidence presented at trial showed the following. Jennifer Clark

was married to Donald, and they had two young sons, ages eight and

ten. During the course of the Clarks’s marriage, which ended in

divorce four months before Donald’s murder, Jennifer had at least

four extramarital affairs. At the time of Donald’s murder, Clark’s

most recent affair was with Yost, who was the son of Donald’s best

friend.

In January or February 2008, Yost was having difficulty

getting along with his father and stepmother, so the Clarks allowed

Yost—whose affair with Clark was unknown to Donald—to move in

with them. Yost and Clark continued their affair without Donald’s

knowledge. On March 7, Donald called 911 in the middle of the night when he woke up to find Clark looming over him with an

aluminum baseball bat. Clark told the responding officer that

Donald did not provoke her and she had no reason for her actions.

Nonetheless, Donald told officers that he did not want Clark to be

arrested. Sometime after this incident, Clark told Donald’s sister,

Brenda Maddox, that Clark had held the bat over Donald to see “if

she could go through [with] it.”

The day after the baseball-bat incident, Clark and Donald

agreed to get divorced and went to the courthouse to initiate the

process. Later that day, Donald confronted Yost about Donald’s

suspicions that Yost and Clark were having an affair, and Yost

quickly admitted to it. Donald made Yost move out of the house,

and Clark left to live with Yost at his grandmother’s house. Around

the same time, Clark discovered she was pregnant with a child

whose father she later determined was Yost.

After Clark moved out of the house, Donald hired Danielle

Young to move in and help him take care of the children. Young

agreed and moved in with her two children. In early May 2008, Clark came to Donald’s house unannounced and discovered Young

living there. Clark began screaming, cursing, and throwing things

around the house in front of her children and Young’s children.

Clark also grabbed an aluminum bat that was kept in the house and

threatened Donald. Clark would later complain to Yost about

Donald and on multiple occasions made comments to Yost about

“[g]etting rid” of Donald and asked Yost “stuff like” “[i]f [Clark] led

[Donald] out in the road, would [Yost] run him over.”

The Clarks’s divorce was finalized in July 2008. Donald

retained sole custody of their minor sons and became the sole owner

of the house. In September 2008, Clark and Yost began living with

Maddox. While Clark was living at Maddox’s house, Donald would

visit Clark with their children two to three times a week and

repeatedly asked Clark to move back in with him, but she always

refused. In October 2008, Clark asked Donald if she could come back

home, and Donald agreed. The night before Clark returned to

Donald’s home, she asked Yost to help her hatch a plan to “get rid”

of Donald. Yost responded by calling Clark “crazy,” and Clark did not pursue the conversation any further. After Clark’s return to

Donald’s home, however, she reached out to Yost and informed him

that she wanted to leave Donald again.

In the early morning hours of November 18, 2008, Clark

attacked Donald by bludgeoning him multiple times with an

aluminum baseball bat as he slept. Yost was also present, and the

children were asleep in the home. Clark then convinced Yost to help

her move and dispose of Donald’s body before she cleaned up and

attempted to mislead Donald’s family and friends about his

whereabouts.

At trial, Yost testified to the following. On November 17, Clark

instructed Yost to come to the Clarks’s house very early the next

morning, telling him that she would be ready with some clothes

packed. Clark called him later that same day to instruct him to wait

for her to signal with the back porch light to indicate when it was

safe for Yost to come to the door. Yost went to the house as directed

on November 18 and waited for the porch light signal from Clark.

When Yost entered the house, he saw Clark retrieve the aluminum baseball bat and proceed to hit Donald in the head with it several

times while he slept. Donald began making gurgling sounds as a

result of the trauma. Clark said Yost either had to help dispose of

Donald’s body or risk losing their unborn child. Yost argued with

Clark, but eventually agreed to help her.

Yost admitted that, after the beating, he tied two plastic bags

around Donald’s head. He and Clark rolled Donald’s body in the bed

linens and placed Donald in the trunk of Donald’s own car along

with his wallet, work boots, and the aluminum bat. Clark gave Yost

the keys to Donald’s car and Donald’s cell phone. She instructed

Yost to get rid of the items, the body, and the car, and to make it

appear like Donald merely left home. Yost did not clean anything

in the house before leaving in Donald’s car.

Yost drove to a field, dragged Donald’s body into the woods, and

covered it with a camouflage blanket. He also disposed of Donald’s

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Bluebook (online)
847 S.E.2d 160, 309 Ga. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-ga-2020.