Collins v. State

695 S.E.2d 343, 304 Ga. App. 11, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 1584, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 7, 2010
DocketA10A0645
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 695 S.E.2d 343 (Collins 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
Collins v. State, 695 S.E.2d 343, 304 Ga. App. 11, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 1584, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 437 (Ga. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

A jury convicted Steven Collins of burglary, entering an automobile with the intent to commit theft, and misdemeanor obstruction of a police officer, and he appeals. Collins contends the evidence at trial was insufficient to convict him of burglary, and the trial court erred in declining to give his jury charge on obstruction. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

We view the evidence on appeal in the light most favorable to the verdict, and no longer presume the defendant is innocent. We do not weigh the evidence or decide the witnesses’ credibility, but only determine if the evidence is sufficient to sustain the convictions. Campbell v. State, 278 Ga. 839, 840-841 (1) (607 SE2d 565) (2005). *12 We construe the evidence and all reasonable inferences from the evidence most strongly in favor of the jury’s verdict. Id.

“To warrant a conviction on circumstantial evidence, the proved facts need exclude only reasonable hypotheses — not bare possibilities that the crime could have been committed by someone else. And questions of reasonableness are generally decided by the jury.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Daugherty v. State, 283 Ga. App. 664, 667 (1) (a) (642 SE2d 345) (2007).

1. Viewed in that light, the evidence at trial established that the victim was inside his house when a noise made him look out the window. He saw Collins in the bed of the victim’s pickup truck unlocking the door after forcing open the back sliding window into the truck’s cab, and yelled at him to stop. By the time the victim came outside, Collins was inside the truck. When the victim “hollered” at him, Collins ran off on foot. The victim got into his truck and caught up to Collins, who was by then carrying the victim’s weed-eater, but Collins brandished the tool at the victim, then ran behind some houses into the woods. The victim flagged down a patrol car, which had already responded to another neighbor’s 911 call about a suspicious person.

The police sergeant in the patrol car had responded to the call within sixty seconds, and first talked to two neighbors who had interacted with Collins. The first neighbor saw Collins hide a weed-eater under some bushes at an abandoned house next to hers and then leave. The neighbor testified she thought the weed-eater might be stolen so she retrieved it from the bushes and put it in her driveway. A few minutes later, after a second neighbor had come out of her house to greet her returning children, Collins returned and began looking for the weed-eater. He asked the first neighbor if she had seen it, and the neighbor pointed out the tool in her driveway, which Collins retrieved. Then he asked both neighbors first if they had any spare gasoline, then whether they wanted to buy the weed-eater, and the first neighbor told him, “No and you ripped the weed-eater off and give it back. I will call the cops.” Collins began cussing at both neighbors and then ran off with the tool.

After the two neighbors told the sergeant what happened, he parked his car and began jogging in the direction they indicated Collins had just gone. As he ran, other neighbors told him they had seen a man running. Other police officers took over the chase, and as the sergeant returned to his car the victim drove up and described seeing someone break into his truck and run away. The officer who had taken up the pursuit, which he described as a “wild goose chase,” began following neighbors’ directions and finally saw Collins about five or ten yards away. The officer yelled to him several times, “Atlanta Police, stop,” but Collins kept running. The officer even *13 tually caught up with him and ordered him to the ground with his weapon drawn, and Collins complied.

One of the two neighbors identified Collins in the back of the police car and again at trial as the man who had left and then retrieved the weed-eater from the bushes near her house. The police then drove to the victim’s house, and the victim identified Collins then and later at trial as the man who had broken into his truck. After an officer asked the victim if he was missing anything, the victim discovered a big hole in the wall of the storage room of his house and described his missing weed-eater, which was a particular brand with a special chain cutter attached instead of the usual string cutter. The victim then identified as his the weed-eater which the police retrieved near the area where Collins was arrested, which Collins had been carrying when the victim drove up to him on the street.

Collins was indicted for burglary by entering the victim’s storage shed “without authority and with intent to commit a theft.” He argues the evidence on this count was insufficient because the State presented no direct evidence he entered the shed, and no one saw him in or near it. Although witnesses saw him with the victim’s weed-eater, no evidence disputed his explanation that he found it in a ditch beside the road while he was on his way to the store, he argues. But once the State showed that Collins possessed goods that were stolen in a burglary, an “unsatisfactory explanation” of that possession supports his burglary conviction. “Whether a defendant’s explanation of possession is satisfactory is a question for the jury,” and a guilty verdict “reflects the jury’s dissatisfaction with defendant’s explanation.” (Citation omitted.) Chambers v. State, 288 Ga. App. 550, 551 (654 SE2d 451) (2007). In addition to establishing Collins’ recent possession of the stolen tool, the State also presented evidence that the neighbors saw him hide it under the bushes, the victim saw him breaking into his truck, he retrieved the weed-eater from the neighbor’s driveway and offered to sell it to her, and he discarded it as he ran from the police.

Collins also argues that the State failed to show that the weed-eater had been “recently” stolen, because no one testified about the length of time the item had been missing. The victim only realized it was gone after Collins was arrested and the police asked him if he was missing anything. But the victim also testified that when he looked around his property, he saw that the siding on his storage shed had been “peeled back,” leaving a hole big enough for a person to enter, and found his tool missing. ‘“What constitutes recent possession is in all cases a jury question,’” Hanson v. State, 229 Ga. App. 205, 206 (1) (493 SE2d 605) (1997), and here, a jury could infer that the theft was recent because the thief tore a large, *14 obvious hole in the side of the attached shed which the homeowner saw immediately once he looked at the structure. See Rivera v. State, 293 Ga. App. 215 (666 SE2d 739) (2008) (evidence defendant possessed stolen items close to burglarized dwelling the day after burglary and tried to evade police was sufficient); Martin v. State, 254 Ga. App. 40, 41 (1) (561 SE2d 154) (2002) (evidence defendant pawned stolen items within hours of burglary, had been at burglary sites before, and gave police inconsistent statements sufficient).

Finally, Collins argues that the circumstantial evidence did not exclude every other reasonable hypothesis except guilt, and that it would be “illogical” for him to break into the shed, steal the weed-eater, hide it, then ask neighbors where it was when he returned to retrieve it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
695 S.E.2d 343, 304 Ga. App. 11, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 1584, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-state-gactapp-2010.