Jacobs v. State

303 Ga. 245
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 5, 2018
DocketS17A1892
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 303 Ga. 245 (Jacobs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. State, 303 Ga. 245 (Ga. 2018).

Opinion

303 Ga. 245 FINAL COPY

S17A1892. JACOBS v. THE STATE.

MELTON, Presiding Justice.

Following a jury trial, John Alan Jacobs was found guilty of malice

murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm during

the commission of a felony in connection with the shooting death of his wife,

Harriette.1 On appeal, Jacobs contends that the trial court erred in allowing

1 On July 7, 2015, Jacobs was indicted for malice murder, felony murder predicated on aggravated assault, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. Following an October 5-8, 2015 jury trial, Jacobs was found guilty on all counts. On October 9, 2015, the trial court sentenced Jacobs to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for malice murder and five consecutive years for possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The trial court purported to merge the remaining counts for sentencing purposes. However, with respect to the felony murder count, this count was actually “vacated by operation of law” rather than “merged” with the malice murder count for sentencing purposes. See Malcolm v. State, 263 Ga. 369 (4) (434 SE2d 479) (1993). Jacobs filed a motion for new trial on October 27, 2015, which he amended on November 18, 2016. Following a December 13, 2016 hearing, the court denied the motion on December 27, 2016. Following the payment of costs, Jacobs’ timely appeal was docketed in this Court for the August 2017 term and submitted for decision on the briefs. certain statements of Harriette to be admitted at trial under the residual hearsay

exception contained in OCGA § 24-8-807; that the trial court erred in its

instruction on good character evidence; and that his trial counsel was

ineffective. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

1. Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, the evidence

presented at trial revealed that Harriette had filed for divorce from Jacobs after

discovering that he had been cheating on her. On October 10, 2014, six days

before the couple was scheduled to appear in court in connection with the

divorce proceedings, police responded to a call to Jacobs’ home. Jacobs met

police at the gate of his home and informed them that he had returned home

from a festival to find his wife sitting in a rocking chair on the couple’s back

porch, dead from an ostensibly self-inflicted gunshot wound through her cheek.

However, the investigation at the scene revealed that the area had been staged

to look like a suicide rather than a murder. Specifically, despite the large amount

of blood that had dried and congealed around the place where Harriette’s body

was seated, the gun found on the floor beside Harriette and near Harriette’s

outstretched right arm was “essentially clean” and had almost no blood on it,

indicating that, according to one of the State’s experts, the gun had been placed

2 on the floor “well after the bloodshed event [had] stopped.” There was also a

coffee stain on Harriette’s shirt and a coffee cup, which was turned upside

down, on the wood floor on the opposite side of Harriette from where the gun

was found. But, much like the gun found at the scene, there were no bloodstains

on the coffee cup. This showed that the cup had also been placed where it was

found after the blood had stopped flowing from Harriette’s wound. There was

also a blood transfer stain on the right hand arm of the rocking chair that

Harriette was sitting in, indicating that Harriette’s right arm had originally been

resting on the arm rest of the chair while she was in a natural sitting position,

and then her arm was moved after it became saturated with blood. Harriette’s

hands also tested negative for gunshot residue, and the State’s medical examiner

determined that, based on gunpowder stippling, Harriette had to have been shot

from a minimum distance of six inches away. The .38 caliber revolver used to

kill Harriette was owned by Jacobs, and he kept this gun hidden behind a

portrait of a family member in the master bedroom of the house.

When Jacobs was questioned by the GBI, one of the agents noticed drops

of what appeared to be blood on Jacobs’ shoe. This led to a forensic examination

of Jacobs’ clothes, which revealed twenty drops of Harriette’s blood on Jacobs’

3 left pant leg and ten drops of her blood on his right pant leg, and revealed that

the drops of blood on his shoes came from Harriette’s body. The lead GBI agent

who investigated the crime scene testified that the drops on Jacobs’ clothing

appeared to have been caused by Harriette’s blood dripping from her body,

striking the blood already pooling on the ground, and splashing onto Jacobs.

At trial, the trial court allowed various witnesses who were close friends

and confidantes of Harriette to testify about statements allegedly made to them

by Harriette before she died. Specifically, a “really good friend[ ]” of

Harriette’s, Marilisse Mars, who had known Harriette through church for years

and with whom Harriette had confided about her life, testified that Harriette told

her that she was worried and afraid, and that if anything ever happened to

Harriette, Jacobs would have been the one who did it. Mars also testified that

Harriette told her that, no matter what it might look like, Harriette would never

hurt herself. Another witness, Patricia Briscoe, who had been close friends with

Harriette since 1993 and with whom Harriette would sometimes spend the

holidays, testified that Harriette expressed to her that she was concerned for her

own safety, because Jacobs had said that he would throw Harriette into a pond

or put her in the woods where no one would ever find her. Briscoe even gave

4 Harriette a set of keys to her sister’s house in case Harriette felt unsafe at home

and needed a place to stay. Briscoe also testified that Harriette instructed her to

“go to the highest mountaintop and yell and scream and tell the world” that

Harriette did not hurt herself, if anything ever happened to Harriette. A third

close friend, Kimberly Dawn Jacobs, met Harriette in 1974, and she and

Harriette were “like sisters” going to school together in high school. Dawn

Jacobs reconnected with Harriette at a high school reunion in 2013, and the two

remained “like sisters,” communicating several times per week and sharing

about their “day to day lives, [their children], what was going on personally,

[and] everything.” Dawn Jacobs testified that Harriette told her that Jacobs said

he could make Harriette disappear and never be heard from again; that Jacobs

would disinherit their children; that Jacobs would stop paying for the children’s

schooling if Harriette ever left him; and that Jacobs said that he did not mind

going to prison. Another witness, Chip Allgood, met Harriette when she was

fifteen and he was eighteen, and he reconnected with her through Facebook in

2014. After several conversations and getting closer to each other over time, she

began having an affair with Allgood. Allgood testified that Harriette told him

that Jacobs was very controlling in their relationship and that she only stayed in

5 the relationship as long as she did because she was afraid that her children

would not receive financial help if she left him. Allgood also testified that

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Bluebook (online)
303 Ga. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-state-ga-2018.