Graham v. State

769 S.E.2d 753, 331 Ga. App. 36, 2015 Ga. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 6, 2015
DocketA14A1560
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 769 S.E.2d 753 (Graham 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
Graham v. State, 769 S.E.2d 753, 331 Ga. App. 36, 2015 Ga. App. LEXIS 90 (Ga. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

MCFADDEN, Judge.

After a jury trial, Alethea Graham was convicted of forgery in the first degree. She appeals, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, the allowance of hearsay testimony, the constitutionality of the forgery statute, a jury charge on the uttering element of first degree forgery, the denial of an appeal bond, and the denial of her constitutional right to a speedy trial. But there was enough evidence to support the verdict, the testimony allowed was not hearsay, the constitutionality of the statute was not timely raised, the jury charge was a correct statement of the law, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying an appeal bond. Accordingly, we affirm in part. However, the trial court did not make the requisite findings of fact and conclusions of law in determining the constitutional speedy trial issue, and we thus remand the case for the trial court to enter a proper order on that issue.

1. Sufficiency of the evidence.

Graham enumerates that the trial court erred in denying her motions for both a directed verdict of acquittal and a new trial because there was insufficient evidence to support the verdict.

Whether an appellant is asking this court to review a lower court’s refusal to grant a new trial or its refusal to grant a motion for directed verdict, this court can only review the case under the standard espoused in Jackson v. Virginia, [37]*37443 U. S. 307 (99 SCt 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979) to determine if the evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, supports the verdict.

Batten v. State, 295 Ga. 442, 444 (1) (761 SE2d 70) (2014) (citations omitted).

So viewed, the evidence shows that Graham’s father, Nathaniel Graham, Sr., lived in the High Point Crossing Apartments in Augusta, Georgia. On March 31,2009, he fell inside his apartment and suffered a brain injury. He was admitted to the Veterans Administration hospital in Augusta. According to a hospital administrator, Graham represented herself as being the guardian of her father, and the hospital had a document on file that purportedly appointed her as such.

Approximately two weeks after the father’s injury, Graham’s brother Nathaniel and sister Lakenya went to visit their father in the hospital, and a hospital employee showed them the purported guardianship document. The document appeared to be letters of guardianship issued in 2002 by the Probate Court of Gwinnett County, finding Nathaniel Graham, Sr., to be incapacitated and designating Graham as his guardian. Graham’s siblings were suspicious of the document’s authenticity because their father had never lived in Gwinnett County.

Graham’s sister took a copy of the purported letters of guardianship to the probate court in Gwinnett County. The chief clerk of the probate court testified that the document appeared suspect, did not appear to be any kind of record from that court, had markings and stamps that are not used by that court, and had an unrecognizable judge’s signature. The chief clerk further testified that she conducted a search of the probate court records going back to the 1950s and determined that Graham’s name did not appear anywhere in the records and that no guardianship had ever been filed for Nathaniel Graham, Sr., in that court.

The Judge of the Gwinnett County Probate Court testified that he had not signed the Graham guardianship document and that his purported signature on it was a forgery. He also testified, and the state introduced documentary evidence showing, that the document appeared to be an altered copy of actual letters of guardianship that had been issued by the judge in an unrelated case involving a different ward and guardian.

An employee of the Richmond County Probate Court testified that in April 2009, a woman matching Graham’s description came to the court with paperwork from the Gwinnett County Probate Court purportedly showing that she was the guardian of her father. The woman inquired about transferring the guardianship to Richmond [38]*38County. But the employee thought the papers looked odd and had been altered, so she contacted the Gwinnett court and learned that the documents were not valid. The employee testified that the purported Gwinnett County letters of guardianship appointing Graham as her father’s guardian may be the document that she had seen.

The former assistant manager of the High Point Crossing Apartments testified that after Graham’s father was injured and taken to the hospital, Graham came to the apartment complex office with paperwork seeking access to her father’s apartment. The manager put the papers in the father’s file and gave Graham a key to the apartment. When the assistant manager subsequently looked in the file, she saw the purported letters of guardianship from Gwinnett County, which had not previously been in the file. She later learned that the guardianship document was fake.

The prior version of the forgery statute, OCGA § 16-9-1, applies to this case.1 It provides:

[A] person commits the crime of first-degree forgery if “with intent to defraud he knowingly makes, alters, or possesses any writing in a fictitious name or in such manner that the writing as made or altered purports to have been made by another person, at another time, with different provisions, or by authority of one who did not give such authority and utters or delivers such writing.”

Martinez v. State, 325 Ga. App. 267, 269 (1) (a) (750 SE2d 504) (2013) (quoting OCGA § 16-9-1 (a) (2007)).

The crux of Graham’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence is that there was no direct eyewitness testimony that she possessed or uttered the forged letters of guardianship. But “[f]orgery .. . may be proved by circumstantial evidence.” Hudson v. State, 188 Ga. App. 684, 689 (2) (374 SE2d 212) (1988) (citations and punctuation omitted). In this case, Graham was named as the guardian in the fraudulent letters of guardianship, there was direct evidence that she claimed to be her father’s guardian, and as recounted above, there was ample circumstantial evidence that she possessed and uttered that falsified document. Accordingly, the evidence “was sufficient for a rational trier of fact to find [Graham] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of forgery in the first degree.” Martinez, supra at 270 (1) (a) (citations and punctuation omitted). See also Hudson, supra at [39]*39689-690 (2) (although circumstantial, ample evidence to support guilty verdict as to first degree forgery).

2. Hearsay.

In three separate enumerations, Graham argues that the trial court erred in allowing her siblings and a hospital administrator to give hearsay testimony about a hospital employee’s statement that Graham had presented the purported guardianship document to the hospital. However, as the state noted and as the trial court correctly found, the testimony was not hearsay because it was not offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted.

OCGA § 24-8-801

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
769 S.E.2d 753, 331 Ga. App. 36, 2015 Ga. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-state-gactapp-2015.