Leppla v. State

627 S.E.2d 794, 277 Ga. App. 804, 2006 Fulton County D. Rep. 345, 2006 Ga. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 23, 2006
DocketA05A1999
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 627 S.E.2d 794 (Leppla 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
Leppla v. State, 627 S.E.2d 794, 277 Ga. App. 804, 2006 Fulton County D. Rep. 345, 2006 Ga. App. LEXIS 75 (Ga. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

Phipps, Judge.

Gregory Leppla was indicted and tried for kidnapping with bodily injury of Cara Hyatt, aggravated assault on Hyatt and Patty Holland, and hijacking a motor vehicle. At a jury trial, Leppla was convicted of kidnapping with bodily injury and of the two counts of aggravated assault. He was found not guilty of motor vehicle hijacking. He was given a sentence of life imprisonment for kidnapping with bodily injury and a concurrent ten-year sentence for aggravated assault on Holland. His conviction of aggravated assault on Hyatt was merged into his kidnapping with bodily injury conviction for sentencing purposes.

Leppla appeals his convictions and the denial of his motions for new trial. He complains of the effectiveness of his trial attorney, and he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the asportation element of his kidnapping conviction. Although Leppla has not carried his burden of showing ineffective assistance of counsel, his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support his kidnapping conviction is meritorious. We, therefore, reverse that conviction and remand the case for resentencing; we affirm Leppla’s remaining convictions.

Hyatt testified that on the evening of January 14, 2000, she stopped at a Kroger grocery store on her way home from work to get a birthday cake for her daughter. Upon returning to her two-door car, she put the cake on the floorboard of the passenger side of the car and then walked around the rear of the car to the driver’s side. After she opened the door and started to get into the car, she was accosted by a man wearing a mask. He stuck a gun in her rib cage, grabbed her and [805]*805began to push her toward the car, and told her to “[s]hut up and get in the car.” Hyatt testified that she resisted by bracing her back against the car door. The man kept yelling at her to get in the car, but she refused to do so and screamed for help. He then began to hit her in the head with the gun. As they struggled, he continued to hit her in the head with the gun. According to Hyatt, she realized she was bleeding as they lost their balance and fell together to the ground. He landed on top of her and kept hitting her.

As Leppla and Hyatt were struggling, Holland appeared in the Kroger parking lot and observed what was happening. When Holland ran to the scene, Leppla turned toward her, pointed the gun at her, and told her to leave. At about that time, several men in the parking lot came to Hyatt’s assistance, pulled Leppla off her, and disarmed and subdued him. By that time, Hyatt was on the ground at the rear of the car. The mask was removed from Leppla’s face, and he was identified as a Kroger employee.

Leppla testified in his defense that he had been drinking heavily at the time of the incident and had concocted an irrational plan to go to the Kroger store during off-duty hours and to scare customers away, thereby causing a drop-off in business through adverse publicity and a resultant lessening of his work responsibilities. Leppla admitted that he went to the store in possession of a pellet gun, a knife, a ski mask, and a pair of rubber gloves. Unfortunately for Hyatt, she was the first person he saw. Leppla testified that his intent was to scare her away by brandishing the gun, that he did not intend to abduct her or hijack the car, and that he lost control and began to hit her when she refused to get into her car.

When Corporal Horace Perry of the Forsyth County Sheriffs Office went to the Kroger the day after the incident, the store manager informed him that Leppla’s car was in the parking lot. After verifying that the car belonged to Leppla, Perry had the vehicle impounded. The lead investigator in the case, Detective Bruce Brueggeman, obtained warrants to search Leppla’s car and his residence. Flexible handcuffs and a knife were found in the car. Pellets and cartridges for the gun recovered from the crime scene were found in Leppla’s residence, along with other latex gloves.

1. The trial court erred in denying Leppla’s motion for directed verdict on the kidnapping charge.

Under OCGA § 16-5-40 (a), “[a] person commits the offense of kidnapping when he abducts or steals away any person without lawful authority or warrant and holds such person against his will.” [806]*806Therefore, the elements of kidnapping are “(1) an illegal holding, (2) an overmastering of the victim’s will, and (3) an asportation of the victim.”1

Courts throughout the country have grappled with the difficult question of how much and what kind of asportation will suffice to support a kidnapping conviction.2 The Model Penal Code states that the victim must have been moved “from his place of residence or business, or a substantial distance from the vicinity where he is found.”3 Under this approach, a kidnapping is complete when the victim has been forced to leave the security of one location and moved to another.4 In other jurisdictions, various tests have evolved to determine whether a kidnapping conviction is sustainable where, as here, the defendant has been charged with kidnapping based on his movement of the victim during the commission of a separate offense.5 The purpose of these tests is to preclude kidnapping convictions based on trivial changes of location having no bearing on the type of evil which a kidnapping statute is intended to prevent.6

The victim in Brown v. State7 was a female police officer who was acting as a decoy while standing beside a public street. The defendants accosted her and dragged her a distance of 15 feet from the street into a vacant lot. Clearly, in Brown, the victim had been moved from the security of one location to a less secure location, albeit a short distance. This court thus found the evidence sufficient to support the defendants’ kidnapping convictions. The court held that any unlawful asportation, “however slight,” is sufficient to show the “taking” element.8

Later, in Love v. State,9 the defendant was convicted of kidnapping with bodily injury by reason of having forced the victim from a seated position on a concrete wall to the ground several feet below before he raped her. A two-judge plurality of this court found the evidence sufficient to support the kidnapping conviction, citing Brown as authority for the proposition that only the slightest movement is [807]*807required to constitute the element of asportation.10 In a special concurrence, Judge (now Justice) Benham provided more explicit analysis. He reasoned:

In the case sub judice, the “carrying away” was ever so slight, occurring when defendant dislodged the victim from the concrete wall and forced her to the ground several feet below, thereby removing her from a public place to a concealed place. Appellant would have us rule that for asportation to take place, the perpetrator must remove the victim to a “different location.” “Asportation” does not require removal to a different location.

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Leppla v. State
627 S.E.2d 794 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
627 S.E.2d 794, 277 Ga. App. 804, 2006 Fulton County D. Rep. 345, 2006 Ga. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leppla-v-state-gactapp-2006.