Deuntria Lyons v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 2021
DocketA20A2041
StatusPublished

This text of Deuntria Lyons v. State (Deuntria Lyons 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
Deuntria Lyons v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION MILLER, P. J., MERCIER, J., and SENIOR APPELLATE JUDGE PHIPPS.

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. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

February 3, 2021

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A20A2041. LYONS v. THE STATE.

PHIPPS, Senior Appellate Judge.

In 2012, a jury found Deuntria Lyons guilty of six counts of armed robbery and

one count of aggravated battery. Following the denial of his motion for new trial,

Lyons appeals his convictions. His pro se appellate brief enumerates 49 errors, nearly

all of which require consideration of the evidence presented at trial. Because Lyons

asserted below that the transcript does not accurately reflect what transpired at trial

and because the trial court erred by failing to follow the procedural requirements of

OCGA § 5-6-41 (f) to resolve any difference, we vacate the trial court’s order

denying Lyons’ motion for new trial and remand the case to the trial court. We

decline to rule on Lyons’ remaining enumerations of error until any questions

regarding the transcript have been resolved. The record shows that following his convictions, Lyons filed a timely motion

for new trial, which he amended several times. At a hearing on his amended motion

for new trial in May 2019, Lyons indicated to the trial court that he was no longer

satisfied with his appellate counsel and discharged him in open court. At a status

hearing in October 2019, Lyons told the trial court that he had not been able to hire

another attorney and that he wanted to proceed pro se. Lyons informed the trial court

that he did not have his trial transcript and asked the trial court to take his case off of

the superior court docket indefinitely until he received the transcript and filed his

amended grounds for his motion for new trial. The trial court stated that it could not

“let the case just sit,” so it would set the hearing on the motion for new trial in

approximately 120 days, which would give Lyons time to obtain and study the

transcript. The trial court told Lyons that after he read the transcript, he would need

to amend his motion for new trial to add his grounds, and then the trial court would

hear the motion. On November 12, 2019, the trial court issued an order scheduling

a hearing on Lyons’ motion for new trial for February 21, 2020.

Lyons filed a motion requesting the trial transcript on December 13, 2019. One

month later, on January 13, 2020, the trial court ordered the clerk of the superior court

to provide Lyons with a certified copy of his trial transcript. On February 18, 2020,

2 Lyons filed a motion objecting to the trial transcript. Lyons stated in his motion that

he could not amend the grounds for his motion for new trial because of the errors in

the trial transcript and requested that he be able to amend his grounds after the

corrections of the transcript were made. The same day, Lyons filed a motion

requesting a hearing on his objection to the trial transcript, citing OCGA § 5-6-41. In

the motion, Lyons requested that witnesses be subpoenaed if needed to supplement

the record.

At the scheduled motion for new trial hearing on February 21, 2020, the State

informed the trial court that Lyons had filed a motion objecting to the trial transcript

and a motion requesting a hearing on his objection to the trial transcript. The State

noted that it had not actually received service copies of the motions, but had obtained

them through the clerk’s file management website and was ready to address them. The

trial court then indicated that it would hear from Lyons on the motion objecting to the

trial transcript. Lyons indicated that he did not have the motion he had filed with the

clerk, but he had a detailed listing with all of the errors in the transcript. According

to Lyons, “a lot of the transcript was altered, a lot of things were omitted from the

record.” Lyons told the trial court that he was going to file a new motion with specific

details so the district attorney would have notice of every error and could argue them

3 with Lyons. The State expressed doubt that the court reporter would have inaccurately

transcribed the trial transcript and pointed out that the court reporter who took down

Lyons’ trial was not present. When the trial court asked Lyons if he had anything else

he wished to say, Lyons informed the trial court that he had not received many of the

trial exhibits, and that he had never been “furnished with a witness list to serve people

that testified at trial.” The trial court denied Lyons’ motion objecting to the trial

transcript.

Lyons informed the trial court that he had another pending motion requesting

a hearing on his objection to the trial transcript, and that, pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-41,

if he filed a motion pertaining to errors in the trial transcript, the trial court was

supposed to hold a hearing. The trial court told Lyons that he was “having [the

hearing] right now.” Lyons protested that he had not “been able to put on the record

all the errors in the transcript.” Lyons also pointed out that the trial court had not put

him on notice that the court was going to hear the motions relating to the trial

transcript because the trial court’s order indicated that the February 21 hearing was

for the motion for new trial. At the State’s suggestion, the trial court allowed Lyons

to put on the record the errors he claimed were in the transcript. Lyons took the

4 opportunity to describe at least 21 instances in the transcript he believed were

inaccurate.

Lyons then argued his motion for new trial, repeatedly commenting that the

hearing should be rescheduled until the transcript discrepancies were resolved. After

hearing argument from the State, the trial court denied Lyons’ motion for new trial.

In the trial court’s March 4, 2020 written order denying Lyons’ motion for new

trial, the trial court addressed Lyons’ complaints about his trial transcript as follows:

[Lyons] asserts that his trial transcripts have been erroneously transcribed or altered to his detriment in numerous ways. To the extent these arguments bear on [Lyons’] Amended Motion for New Trial, the Court notes that [Lyons’] trial was taken down by a licensed court reporter and the transcripts were filed with accompanying certifications that they were true, correct, and complete. A transcript filed in this way is presumed to be accurate. [See OCGA § 15-14-5.] In the absence of any actual evidence to the contrary, the Court will follow that presumption.

This appeal followed.

1. Lyons contends that the trial court failed to follow the proper OCGA § 5-6-

41 procedures regarding his motions objecting to the trial transcript and requesting

5 a hearing on his objections. Specifically, Lyons argues that the trial court erred by not

setting a hearing with notice to both parties. We agree.

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Related

Ross v. State
263 S.E.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1980)
State v. Nejad
690 S.E.2d 846 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
Deuntria Lyons v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deuntria-lyons-v-state-gactapp-2021.