Lucas v. the State

760 S.E.2d 257, 328 Ga. App. 741
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 31, 2014
DocketA14A0539
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 760 S.E.2d 257 (Lucas v. the 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
Lucas v. the State, 760 S.E.2d 257, 328 Ga. App. 741 (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Phipps, Chief Judge.

Christopher Lucas was convicted of two counts of burglary, 1 criminal damage to property (second degree), 2 theft by taking, 3 and possession of tools for the commission of a crime. 4 He contends that the trial court erred by (1) sentencing him for both burglary counts, because they were part of a single continuous act and should have merged; and (2) denying his motion for new trial based on his claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Because the two burglaries merged as a matter of fact, we vacate one burglary conviction and sentence and remand the case for resentencing. We affirm Lucas’s remaining convictions because Lucas failed to show that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance.

1. Lucas contends that the trial court erred by sentencing him for two burglary counts instead of only one. He asserts that the charged burglary offenses merged because they were committed at the same time and place, were part of a continuous criminal act, and were inspired by the same criminal intent.

Count 1 of the indictment alleged that Lucas committed burglary when, on March 28, 2012, without authority and with intent to commit a theft therein, he entered and remained within a building of another (to wit: a Huddle House restaurant at a specified location). Count 5 alleged that Lucas committed burglary when, on the same date, without authority and with intent to commit a theft therein, he entered and remained within that same building (the Huddle House restaurant). The indictment stated that the offense alleged in Count 1 was “separate and apart from the offense alleged in Count 5” of the indictment, and that the offense alleged in Count 5 was “separate and apart from the offense alleged in Count 1.”

The evidence showed the following. On March 28,2012, a Huddle House restaurant waitress arrived at work shortly after 5:00 a.m., and found the glass on the front door broken. The waitress telephoned *742 police and the manager. When the manager arrived, she entered the store and observed that the frame of the office door was broken, the safe that had been in the office was gone, and the cash register had been pried, but not opened. A “change jar” that was kept inside the safe, containing about $400, was also missing.

A police detective arrived and spoke with the owner, who had also arrived. The owner showed the detective a surveillance video taken from the restaurant’s cameras; the video was later shown to the jury. 5 The video showed the glass on the front door break and a person enter the building. The person attempted to open the cash register, but could not. He left and returned between five and twenty minutes later. When he returned, he broke into the office with “some sort of metal thing,” dragged a safe out of the office, put the safe in a vehicle, then left. A second police detective saw still photographs taken from the video and told the first detective that he recognized the person depicted therein as Lucas.

The two detectives then went to Lucas’s home to interview him. Lucas told the detectives that he would return the safe to them and possibly some cash or the contents of the safe. The detectives went to the police station and waited for Lucas, but he did not arrive.

The detectives later returned to Lucas’s house, which he shared with his girlfriend, T. H. T. H. told the detectives that she and Lucas took the safe from the restaurant. She also told the detectives where the safe could be found. Based on their conversation with T. H., the detectives were able to locate the safe; it was in a ravine by a roadside, and a section of the safe had been cut out. T. H. consented to a search of the home, and directed detectives to a duffle bag in the home’s crawlspace. The bag contained a crow bar, a power saw, and cutting blades capable of cutting through pipes and “just about anything.” Detectives also found in the crawlspace ajar like the cashjar that had been inside the safe.

“Under Georgia law, offenses merge and multiple punishment is prohibited if one offense is included in the other as a matter of law or fact.” 6

For separate offenses charged in one indictment to carry separate punishments, they must rest on distinct criminal acts. If they were committed at the same time and place and *743 [were part] of a continuous criminal act, and inspired by the same criminal intent, they are susceptible of only one punishment. 7

“Whether offenses merge is a legal question, which we review de novo.” 8

The version of OCGA § 16-7-1 (a) in effect when the offenses were committed (March 2012) provided, in pertinent part: “A person commits the offense of burglary when, without authority and with the intent to commit a felony or theft therein, he enters or remains . . . within any . . . building ... or any room or any part thereof.” The question presented here, then, is whether Lucas’s acts of entering, exiting, and reentering the same restaurant twice within a five to twenty-minute period for the purpose of committing theft can be punished as two “separate units of prosecution” under the burglary statute. 9 The state contends that the two burglary counts did not merge, because the conduct at issue was not part of a single continuous act. According to the state, “the continuum of [Lucas’s] act was broken when he left the premises of Huddle House for a period of time and returned to take the store’s safe.” 10 We disagree.

Here, both burglary counts charged Lucas with entering the same building on the same date with the intent to commit the same crime—theft. And the evidence showed that the acts were committed at the same location, were inspired by the same criminal intent (to commit theft in the Huddle House restaurant building), and were part of a continuous criminal act spanning a matter of minutes. The criminal acts were not “separated by a meaningful interval of time or with distinct intentions.”* 11 The interval of minutes between the acts “did not signal the completion of a separate criminal act but signified only the temporary failure to accomplish the one intentional criminal transaction.” 12 The criminal conduct constituted a single course of *744 conduct, not separate offenses. 13 Further, without evidence of a legislative intent to allow multiple punishments for the same course of conduct, acts that constitute a continuing criminal course of conduct are not punishable separately; 14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
760 S.E.2d 257, 328 Ga. App. 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-the-state-gactapp-2014.