Clayton v. State
This text of 738 S.E.2d 299 (Clayton 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.
Opinion
Following a jury trial, Taneka Aundrell Clayton was found guilty of aggravated assault1 and criminal trespass.2 She appeals the denial of her motion for new trial, contending that the trial court erred in allowing the State to bolster witness statements and also erred in charging the jury on aggravated assault. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict,3 the record [714]*714shows that on April 4, 2008, Clayton went to an apartment complex where her husband, Keita Andrews, from whom she was separated, was visiting a friend. Clayton and Andrews argued. Clayton broke Andrews’ phone and threw it into the woods. He called the police, and an officer came to the complex so that Andrews could move his belongings without interference from Clayton. Later, as Andrews and his friend were leaving, Clayton rammed his car with her vehicle, then blocked his car so that he could not leave. He again called the police, and the same officer responded, telling Clayton not to restrict Andrews’ movement. Andrews and his friend then drove to another apartment complex. Clayton called Andrews on his phone and told him, “Oh, you just slipped.... Go look at your car.” When he went to look at his car, he saw that it had been scratched all over, and that a half-heart and the number seven were scratched on it. He again called police, and the same officer who responded to the prior incidents prepared a report. Andrews then went to visit another friend, and in the early morning hours of April 5, 2008, as he was getting in his car to leave, Clayton arrived. She threw a large “concrete brick rock” weighing approximately ten pounds at him, hitting his arm and causing it to bleed, and breaking his windshield. He again called the police, and the same officer came to the scene and issued a warrant for Clayton’s arrest. Andrews got his windshield repaired about four days later, and the next day, he found that a brick had been thrown through the car’s windshield, another brick had been left on his hood, and the car had been scratched. Clayton was arrested the same day.
1. Clayton contends that the trial court erred in allowing the State to bolster Andrews’ testimony and the testimony of an eyewitness by permitting an investigating officer to read their witness statements at trial. Specifically, she argues that the admission of such prior consistent statements amounted to improper bolstering.
However, an examination of the portion of the transcript Clayton cites shows that the “objection” she asserts was, in fact, a motion for a directed verdict. That motion related to the officer’s reading a statement by the eyewitness regarding an allegation that Clayton threatened to kill Andrews. The alleged statement related to a charge of terroristic threats; however, pretermitting whether its admission was error, this could not have contributed to Clayton’s guilty verdict on this issue, as she was acquitted of terroristic threats. An appellant must show harm as well as error to prevail on appeal.4 We find no error.5
[715]*7152. Although Clayton raised no objection to the jury charge at trial, on appeal, she contends that a portion of the charge on aggravated assault was not supported by evidence in the record, and that the trial court erroneously charged the jury on a method of committing aggravated assault that was not specified in the indictment, thus expanding the ways in which the jury could find her guilty.
The indictment charged Clayton with throwing a large rock at Andrews’ head, “an object which, when used offensively, could or did actually result in the serious bodily injury to [Andrews’] arm.” In its charge to the jury, the trial court defined aggravated assault and both manners of committing simple assault:
Aperson commits simple assault when that person attempts to commit a violent injury to the person of another. A person commits the offense of aggravated assault when that person assaults another person with any object that, when used offensively against a person, is likely to or does result in serious bodily injury. To constitute such an assault, actual injury to the alleged victim need not be shown. It is only necessary that the evidence show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant attempted to cause a violent injury to the alleged victim or intentionally committed an act that placed the alleged victim in reasonable fear of immediately receiving a violent injury.
Citing Taiton v. State,
Unlike in Taitón, in the instant case, “the trial court did not charge a separate, unalleged method of committing aggravated assault, but simply defined both methods of committing simple assault, a lesser included offense.”8 Further, the trial court’s charge in the instant case tracked the suggested pattern charge on aggravated assault, which includes the statutory definitions of simple assault.9 We find no error.
As the trial court did not rule on whether the evidence supported the charge on aggravated assault, we have nothing to review in this portion of the enumeration.10
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
738 S.E.2d 299, 319 Ga. App. 713, 2013 Fulton County D. Rep. 262, 2013 WL 452806, 2013 Ga. App. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayton-v-state-gactapp-2013.