Emmett Lenoir v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 2, 2013
DocketA13A0128
StatusPublished

This text of Emmett Lenoir v. State (Emmett Lenoir 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
Emmett Lenoir v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION PHIPPS, C. J., ELLINGTON, P. J., and BRANCH, J.

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/

July 2, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A0128. LENOIR v. THE STATE.

PHIPPS, Chief Judge.

In connection with an attack upon his then-fiancé D. W. in the presence of her

young son, Emmett Lenoir was convicted of aggravated battery, sexual battery, false

imprisonment, criminal damage to property in the second degree, cruelty to children

in the second degree, and interference with a 911 call. In this appeal, Lenoir

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying the property damage conviction.

He also argues that the trial court erred in instructing the jury during the final charge

and in rejecting his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Lenoir has shown merit

in only the sufficiency challenge; accordingly, we reverse his property damage

conviction and affirm his other convictions. At trial, the state showed the following. During the time in question, Lenoir

was living with D. W. and her son, who was about seven years old.

D. W. testified about the attack that gave rise to this case. During the pre-dawn

hours of June 21, 2003, D. W. rebuffed Lenoir’s sexual advances. Lenoir, who had

been drinking gin that night, accused D. W. of having an affair, pushed her out of the

bed, and ordered her to sleep in her son’s room. D. W. went to the bedroom where her

son was sleeping, but Lenoir told her to come back to their bedroom. She returned

and got back into the bed. As he sat in bed drinking gin, she fell asleep.

She was soon awakened, however, when Lenoir punched her in the mouth,

causing it to bleed. She sat up. He demanded to know where she had spent her day;

as she was providing him an account, he hit her in the head with the gin bottle,

causing the bottle to break and the side of her head to bleed. Lenoir went to the

kitchen, brought back a bottle of bleach, handed it to her, and ordered her to drink it.

She poured the bleach onto the floor, and he punched her in the face.

D. W. headed to the living room for the only telephone in the house, but Lenoir

pushed her, punched her in the mouth again, then dragged her by the hair back into

the bedroom, where he threw her against the wall and, as D. W. testified, “just started

2 beating me constantly.” By this time, her son had awakened and entered the bedroom;

he was screaming for Lenoir to stop beating his mother.

Lenoir did not stop. He threw a space heater at D. W., striking the side of her

face and head. He pulled down a picture overhanging the bed and broke it into pieces

atop D. W.’s head. Then, he used a piece of the broken wooden frame to beat her

about the head. Her son remained in the room – watching, crying, and screaming.

D. W. fled into the kitchen to retrieve a knife, but Lenoir was able to reach a

steak knife first. When Lenoir tried to stab D. W., she grabbed the blade with her

hand, and the blade broke from its handle. Lenoir grabbed another steak knife; D. W.

grabbed its blade, too, which also broke from the handle. Lenoir began throwing

dishes and glass canisters at D. W. When she tried to run outside, Lenoir grabbed her

by her hair. He turned over the kitchen table. And when she eventually fell to the

floor, he picked up a chair and beat her on the head with it. D. W. sought refuge in

her son’s room, but Lenoir followed her and began striking her in the face and on her

head with a piece of the wooden picture frame. Then he pulled her back into their

bedroom and stomped on her stomach.

D. W. screamed for her son to “go get mommy some help,” and although the

boy tried to run out the front door, he could not open it – Lenoir had secured the door

3 with a chain, which the boy could not reach. D. W. told her son to call 911, but he

could not place a call on the telephone, which was cordless – Lenoir had removed the

battery.

Using one hand to hold D. W. by her hair, Lenoir used his other hand to flip a

table onto its side, then to pry off its leg. Then he beat D. W. on her head with the

table leg. D. W.’s son remained at his mother’s side, screaming. Still holding the table

leg, Lenoir told D. W., “If you let me stick this in you, it will all be over with.” D. W.

recalled that, when she refused, “he tried to stick it in me . . . . I was laying on my

back, but when he was trying I was fighting and I turned over. . . [A]fter I turned

over, . . . I had my legs closed, and he just was trying to stick the table leg up in me.”

The attack had been going on for over an hour. Bleeding profusely, D. W.

began to feel dizzy, as though she would pass out. Lenoir retrieved a bottle of rubbing

alcohol and poured it over D. W.’s lacerated body. D. W.’s son was begging Lenoir

not to kill his mother. D. W. passed out, and when she awakened, Lenoir, her son, and

her car were gone. She went to her neighbor’s house, and her neighbor took her to a

hospital.

Meanwhile, Lenoir had driven to a friend’s house. That friend testified that,

between 6:00 and 7:00 a.m. on June 21, 2003, Lenoir appeared at his door wearing

4 bloody clothing. He had with him D. W.’s son. Lenoir told his friend that he had

“messed up” and that he was leaving. Lenoir left D. W.’s son with his friend,

instructing the friend to call the child’s maternal grandmother. Lenoir’s friend quickly

delivered the boy to his grandmother.

An emergency room doctor testified that D. W. arrived with multiple facial

fractures and fractures to her arm and a finger. She had contusions in both eyes, as

well as contusions all over her body. Her eyes were closed from the swelling, and she

had multiple abrasions and lacerations on her face. He summarized that “she looked

like a victim of a car crash.”

A detective from the sheriff’s office went to the hospital at about 7:00 a.m. to

interview D. W. “[H]er face was completely bloody,” he described. There were severe

lacerations across her face; there was massive swelling around her eye, cheek, and

neck areas; and blood had matted her hair to her head. D. W.’s lacerated hands were

dripping blood to the floor. There were bruises on her arms and legs, lacerations on

her inner knee, and bruises on her thighs. The detective took photographs of D. W.’s

injuries, and those photographs were later shown to the jury.

While the detective was interviewing D. W., her son was brought to the

hospital. While interviewing the boy, the detective observed on the child’s shirt and

5 shoes what appeared to be spots of blood; also, one of his legs had a laceration, and

he had a bruise on his forehead. The detective took photographs of the child’s shirt,

shoes, laceration, and bruise, which photographs were later shown to the jury.

That same day, June 21, 2003, a crime scene investigator1 went to D. W.’s

residence. He testified that, when he walked into the house, he detected a strong odor

of bleach. Strewn about the house, he found, inter alia, overturned furniture; broken

furniture, including a table that was missing a leg; a bloody, detached table leg;

bloody pieces of a picture frame; clumps of hair that appeared to have been pulled out

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