Lester Owensby Pauley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 4, 2020
DocketA20A0272
StatusPublished

This text of Lester Owensby Pauley v. State (Lester Owensby Pauley 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
Lester Owensby Pauley v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION BARNES, P. J., GOBEIL and PIPKIN, 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. Please refer to the Supreme Court of Georgia Judicial Emergency Order of March 14, 2020 for further information at (https://www.gaappeals.us/rules).

April 27, 2020

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A20A0271. PAULEY v. THE STATE. A20A0272. PAULEY v. THE STATE.

GOBEIL, Judge.

Lester Owensby Pauley was charged in two separate indictments with several

offenses involving multiple women. Both Pauley and the State consented to joining

the cases for trial. Following a jury trial, Pauley was convicted of rape, three counts

of aggravated assault, and false imprisonment for crimes involving T. T.; kidnapping,

rape, aggravated sexual battery, false imprisonment, and terroristic threats with

respect to his ex-wife, L. C.; and kidnapping, rape, aggravated battery, false

imprisonment, and terroristic threats related to another ex-wife, M. W. Pauley filed

a motion for new trial, which the trial court denied. On appeal, Pauley asserts that: (1)

there was insufficient evidence to sustain any of his three rape convictions; (2) there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction for aggravated sexual battery as

to L. C.; (3) the State was barred from prosecuting certain counts related to M. W. due

to the expiration of the applicable statute of limitation; and (4) his trial counsel

rendered ineffective assistance in multiple ways. For the reasons that follow, we

conclude that trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to timely

challenge that four of the five1 counts in the indictment relating to M. W. —

kidnapping, aggravated battery, false imprisonment, and terroristic threats — were

barred by the applicable statute of limitation. We therefore reverse these four

convictions. We affirm all of Pauley’s remaining convictions.

On appeal from a criminal conviction, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to support the verdict, and the defendant no longer enjoys a presumption of innocence; moreover, an appellate court determines evidence sufficiency and does not weigh the evidence or determine witness credibility.

Williams v. State, 333 Ga. App. 879, 879 (777 SE2d 711) (2015) (citation and

punctuation omitted). So viewed, the evidence shows that M. W. met Pauley in

February 2008 and married him a few months later on August 1, 2008. M. W.

1 As we later explain, because the indictment was timely filed within the 15- year statute of limitation applicable to the rape count involving M. W., Pauley’s trial counsel necessarily was not ineffective for failing to challenge this count.

2 previously had been married for 43 years prior to her late husband’s death in 2007.

Prior to marrying Pauley, M. W. described that their relationship “wasn’t a very good

relationship,” and there were several times when Pauley “forced himself on [M. W.]”

When M. W. tried to resist Pauley’s attempts to force her to have sex, Pauley would

respond: “I’m a young man and I’m not going to do without sex[.]” Pauley insisted

M. W. sleep in the nude and demanded sex every night contrary to her wishes.

Although there were times that the couple engaged in consensual sex, Pauley

also forced M. W. to have sex against her will. In one specific incident, M. W.

recalled that she was on the couch in the living room when Pauley forced her perform

oral sex while he “held [her] down” and “manhandled [her].” M. W. tried to get her

cell phone, but Pauley grabbed the phone first and “put it down” her throat, and then

he raped her. M. W. recalled that Pauley told her not to fight him while he had her

head turned as he could “snap [her] neck just like that.” M. W. was “choking and

coughing[,]” and “feared for [her] life at that time.” After he raped her, Pauley took

the phone out of M. W.’s mouth. She described the encounter was “a terrible, terrible,

horrible experience[,]” and she would not “want anyone else to ever have to go

through that.” M. W. explained that she never told anyone what was happening in the

relationship because she was ashamed and embarrassed and had always thought of

3 herself as an intelligent woman. M. W. also was afraid to leave Pauley because she

did not know what he would do if he found her, and he had previously threatened her

family. In one instance, when Pauley pushed M. W. down to the floor, M. W.

managed to call law enforcement and she later attempted to apply for a temporary

restraining order for physical abuse, but she did not report being raped.

On yet another occasion, M. W. described that Pauley dragged her from the

bedroom to the back door and pulled off her pants and panties and raped her. Pauley

then grabbed her hair and dragged her to the kitchen door and threatened to put her

out without any clothes on, but then said “nah, I think I’ll keep you a while longer[.]”

Pauley dragged M. W. by the hair to the bedroom after she threatened to leave him.

She fought back, tried to keep her legs together, and held on to her pants, but Pauley

“turned that waistband inside out, ripped it loose from the — where it was sewed

down, getting it off of [M. W.] And he raped [M. W.]”

In August 2008, after Pauley tried to force her to have sex again, M. W. was

able to get to her cell phone and call 911 for assistance in leaving the house. When

the officers arrived, they made Pauley move his truck so that M. W. could leave. This

marked the end of the marriage and M. W. went to court to get a restraining order

against Pauley and then filed for a divorce. However, M. W. did not report to

4 authorities that Pauley had sexually abused her until late 2014. She explained that she

had not filed charges earlier because she felt ashamed.

L. C. first met Pauley on April 21, 2014 and they were married the next day and

moved in together. Prior to meeting Pauley, L. C. had not been in a relationship for

21 years. L. C. described that the couple’s sex life was “abnormal,” and initially they

only engaged in oral sex because “[Pauley] couldn’t do nothing.” The couple started

out having consensual sex but then Pauley started to force L. C. to have sex with him.

Pauley would spit tobacco juice “up in” L. C. every time the couple had sex. L. C.

“was scared of [Pauley] really and [she] was afraid to say anything so he just done

what he wanted to do. Then [she would] have to roll over and he’d do it from the

back[.]” On one occasion, Pauley forced L. C. to have sex in his truck. Another time,

Pauley put a screwdriver into L. C.’s anus even though she told him that she did not

want to have sex with him and it hurt. L. C. noted, “[h]ow are you going to fight a

man off that weighs 280 pounds?” Another time, after L. C. refused to have sex with

Pauley, he dragged her to the bedroom and forced her to take off her clothes and walk

around nude. He then got on top of her and broke her ribs and she told him to get off

her because she could not breathe. Often times, Pauley would force L. C. to sit on his

lap nude and then he would either drag her to the couch or the bedroom “and he just

5 done what [he] wanted to.” L. C. did not fight back because she was afraid of Pauley

and he warned her that he would kill her if she tried to leave or hire a hitman. Pauley

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Lester Owensby Pauley v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lester-owensby-pauley-v-state-gactapp-2020.