Johnny Mack Johnson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 7, 2013
DocketA12A2510
StatusPublished

This text of Johnny Mack Johnson v. State (Johnny Mack Johnson 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
Johnny Mack Johnson v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION MILLER, P. J., RAY and BRANCH, JJ.

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. (Court of Appeals Rule 4 (b) and Rule 37 (b), February 21, 2008) http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 7, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A12A2510. JOHNSON v. THE STATE.

B RANCH, Judge.

On appeal from his conviction for aggravated assault, obstruction, and

possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, Johnny Mack Johnson argues that the

evidence was insufficient and that the trial court should have suppressed all references

to the gun recovered from his home. Johnson also argues that the charge to the jury

was erroneous in a number of respects and that counsel should have withdrawn from

representation because his office had previously represented two victims in the case.

We find no error and affirm.

“On appeal from a criminal conviction, we view the evidence in the light most

favorable to the verdict, with the defendant no longer enjoying a presumption of

innocence.” (Citation omitted.) Reese v. State, 270 Ga. App. 522, 523 (607 SE2d 165) (2004). We neither weigh the evidence nor judge the credibility of witnesses, but

determine only whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the

prosecution, a “rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the

crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307, 319 (III) (B)

(99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).

So viewed, the record shows that on the night of October 21, 2007, Corey

McKeller reported his brother’s car stolen from a street where Johnson lived. The

police told M cKeller to wait for them at the location of the alleged theft. McKeller did

so and was sitting in his car with his infant daughter in the back seat when Johnson

arrived. Sarrain Cook, a friend of McKeller, was also out looking for McKeller’s

brother’s car and arrived as a passenger in a car driven by Kevin Toomer, a friend of

both Cook and McKeller. Cook got out of the car and asked Johnson, the ex-husband

of Cook’s grandmother, what had happened to McKeller’s brother’s car. Johnson

responded, “Boy, I told you when I see you, I was going to get you.” When Cook

responded that he was not a boy, Johnson pulled out a handgun and fired three shots:

the first at the car in which Cook had been a passenger, a second after climbing on top

of the same car as Cook hid behind, and a third as Cook fled down the street. Cook ran

2 to a house with an open door, asked the occupants to call the police, and ran back to

the car in which he had arrived, which picked him up and left the scene.

McKeller, who had remained in his own car, yelled out to Cook and Johnson

that he had called the police. As McKeller drove away, Johnson shot at McKeller’s

car as well. When an arriving police officer told Johnson to place his hands behind his

back, Johnson refused and had to be pepper-sprayed by a second officer. A shell

casing of unspecified caliber was recovered from the street where the shootings took

place.

Johnson was charged with aggravated assault each as to McKeller, his infant

daughter, and Cook (counts 1, 2, and 3); obstruction (count 4); and possession of a

firearm by a convicted felon (count 5). Johnson filed a motion to suppress evidence

including a .25-caliber pearl-handled silver revolver found at his house after his arrest.

At the outset of the hearing on the motion, the State conceded that the search of

Johnson’s home yielding the handgun was illegal. The trial court then suppressed “any

evidence . . . seized at that time.”

At the outset of trial, the court noted that although the State was free to elicit

eyewitness descriptions of the gun Johnson used in the shooting at issue, the State

could make “no reference to the source of the gun,” and that “nothing can be

3 introduced into evidence that was seized” during the illegal search of Johnson’s house.

Johnson’s counsel did not object to this ruling.

At trial, McKeller described the gun he saw Johnson use in the shooting as “a

little silver” handgun with “pearl handles” on its sides. McKeller also described a

prior incident in the spring of 2007 in which Johnson threatened McKeller, Cook, and

Toomer with the same .25-caliber pearl-handled silver handgun and shot at Toomer’s

car twice while Cook was a passenger in it. Johnson’s ex-wife also testified that she

had seen a silver pearl-handled handgun in early 2007 when she was cleaning out

Johnson’s mother’s home after her death and that Johnson had taken the handgun at

that time.

The jury acquitted Johnson of the aggravated assault on the infant but found

him guilty of the remaining charges. He was convicted and sentenced to 46 years to

serve. His motion for new trial was denied.

1. In challenging the sufficiency of the evidence against him, Johnson attacks

the credibility of McKeller, Cook, and Johnson’s ex-wife on the basis of the prior

difficulties between him and all of these witnesses. But such matters of credibility are

for the jury, and not this Court, to decide. As such, the evidence outlined above was

sufficient to sustain Johnson’s conviction. See OCGA §§ 16-5-21 (defining

4 aggravated assault), 16-10-24 (a) (defining misdemeanor obstruction), 16-11-131 (b)

(defining possession of a firearm by a convicted felon); Jackson, supra.

2. On appeal, Johnson argues for the first time that all references to the .25-

caliber handgun, including those made by eyewitnesses as to his possession and use

of the gun before and at the incident at issue, should have been suppressed as a result

of the illegal search of his house conducted afterward. As Johnson himself concedes,

however, there is no authority for such a sweeping prohibition. Further, we will not

consider a motion to suppress raised for the first time on appeal, let alone one

containing constitutional objections. Hatcher v. State, 224 Ga. App. 747, 748-749 (1)

(482 SE2d 443) (1997) (“Failing to file a timely motion to suppress amounts to a

waiver of even constitutional challenges”).

3. Johnson argues that the trial court erred when it refused to charge the jury on

(a) simple assault and (b) reckless conduct as lesser included offenses of aggravated

assault, and that it also erred when (c) it charged the jury that the State need only

prove that a deadly weapon was used in the assaults. Again, we disagree.

(a) Although Johnson suggests that a charge on the lesser included offense of

simple assault was warranted simply because Johnson had been involved in prior

disputes with Cook without injuring Cook, Johnson fails to raise a question of fact as

5 to whether he assaulted Cook without a gun in the course of the incident at issue. This

Court has repeatedly held that where “‘the undisputed evidence shows that [an] assault

was committed with a deadly weapon, it is not error to refuse to charge on simple

assault as a lesser included offense.’” (Emphasis omitted.) Comley v. State, 218 Ga.

App. 520, 521 (2) (462 SE2d 432) (1995), quoting Dickerson v. State, 207 Ga. App.

241 (1) (427 SE2d 591) (1993); see also Clark v. State, 191 Ga. App.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Bright v. State
520 S.E.2d 48 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1999)
Dickerson v. State
427 S.E.2d 591 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1993)
Burns v. State
638 S.E.2d 299 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2006)
Mathis v. State
684 S.E.2d 6 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2009)
Clark v. State
381 S.E.2d 763 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1989)
Hatcher v. State
482 S.E.2d 443 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1997)
Reese v. State
607 S.E.2d 165 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2004)
Jones v. State
717 S.E.2d 526 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2011)
Lytle v. State
718 S.E.2d 296 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
State v. Abernathy
715 S.E.2d 48 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
Comley v. State
462 S.E.2d 432 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1995)

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