Margaret Aeger v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 18, 2020
DocketA20A1544
StatusPublished

This text of Margaret Aeger v. State (Margaret Aeger 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
Margaret Aeger v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION MILLER, P. J., MERCIER 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. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

DEADLINES ARE NO LONGER TOLLED IN THIS COURT. ALL FILINGS MUST BE SUBMITTED WITHIN THE TIMES SET BY OUR COURT RULES.

September 11, 2020

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A20A1544. AEGER v. THE STATE.

MERCIER, Judge.

In connection with the fatal shooting of her boyfriend, Phil Davis, Margaret

Aeger was indicted for malice murder, felony murder, and aggravated assault. A jury

found Aeger guilty of voluntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense of malice

murder, and not guilty of the remaining charges. She appeals the conviction,

contending that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict and that the trial

court gave an improper jury instruction. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

1. Aeger contends that the evidence was insufficient to support a voluntary

manslaughter conviction because the testimony showed that she acted in self-defense.

The evidence was sufficient.

In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Conflicts in the testimony of the witnesses . . . are a matter of credibility for the jury to resolve.

Muckle v. State, 307 Ga. App. 634 (705 SE2d 721) (2011) (citation and punctuation

omitted).

So viewed, the evidence shows the following. Aeger testified that on the

evening of December 22, 2013, she returned home from work to find Davis, her live-

in boyfriend of nine years, drinking alcohol. At the time, Davis was 74 years old and

Aeger was about 51 years old. At Davis’s suggestion, Aeger had sold her own home

to move in with him.

Aeger testified that upon returning home, she and Davis drank whiskey and

talked, then Aeger took a hydrocodone pill for back pain and went to bed. Davis

stayed up. Aeger testified that shortly after she fell asleep, she was awakened by

Davis striking her on her face with his hand and yelling at her to “get out.” Aeger told

Davis that she would leave if he let her get up. Instead of letting Aeger get up, Davis

held the right side of her head and yanked her around in the bed. She broke free, got

up, and put on her housecoat. Davis then just stood there, glaring at her. Aeger moved

2 toward the bedroom door and Davis stepped across the threshold. Aeger then closed

and locked the bedroom door, with her inside and Davis outside the bedroom. Aeger

testified that Davis was turning the doorknob, beating on the door and screaming,

“bitch open this f------ door!” Aeger grabbed a gun from the nightstand and told

Davis that she had his gun and that he needed to “go lay down and sober up.” Davis

continued beating on the door. Aeger fired a shot into the left doorframe and, when

Davis kept trying to get through the door, she fired a shot “forward” into the door.

Aeger then “heard a thump and heard [Davis] say, oh.”

Aeger testified that she fired the gun through the door because “he was coming

through there . . . to get me.” Asked if she believed that Davis would come “through

the door” had she not fired the gun, Aeger replied: “Yes. Because I had experienced

that, not with him but in past history[.]” She said Davis had hit and kicked her before,

though she had not shown anyone any injuries, had not sustained any serious injuries,

and had not contacted police. Aeger testified that she worked in a state prison (from

2009 through 2014) and was trained in firearm use, including in taking defensive

stances when shooting, and agreed that she “easily could have shot him if he busted

through that door.” She admitted that she “had all the weapons in [the] bedroom with”

her. Aeger also had a phone with her in the bedroom and, after the shooting, phoned

3 her daughter. Her daughter told her to call 911, which she did. Aeger admitted at trial

that when officers arrived she did not tell them that she had feared for her life before

firing the gun, though she testified at trial that during the incident she was afraid that

Davis was going to either “paralyze . . . or kill” her. Aeger testified that she and Davis

had not been arguing before Davis entered the bedroom. Asked if Davis had asked

her to move out of the house, Aeger testified that he had previously told her that if she

did not like him putting her dog outside, she “[could] get out too.”

A sergeant with the Vidalia Police Department testified that he and two other

officers went to the residence on the morning of December 23, 2013, in response to

a “shots being fired” report. They shined flashlights through a french door and saw

a person lying on the floor. The officers “asked for the door to be opened” but when

their request was refused, they kicked open the door. They entered and found Davis

lying on the floor outside the bedroom door, motionless. He appeared to be deceased.

The bedroom door appeared to be sturdy, with no defects other than the bullet holes.

Aeger was inside the bedroom.

The sergeant testified that he entered the bedroom and saw Aeger, who

appeared to be intoxicated. She did not have any visible marks on her, and nothing

in the bedroom indicated there had been a struggle. Objects on the night stand were

4 undisturbed. Aeger spontaneously told the sergeant that “she was not going to be hit

by another man anymore, that she would kill the m----- f-----, eventually.” She told

the sergeant that Davis had pulled clumps of hair from the right side of her head and

that the hair was all over the bed. The sergeant looked but did not see any injuries to

Aeger, any clumps of hair missing from her head or on the bed, or “any large clumps

of hair anywhere in [the] bedroom.” He heard Aeger tell emergency medical

personnel that the left side of her head was injured. Officers found on the night stand

the .38 caliber gun Aeger had used in the shooting. They found no weapons near

Davis, and no weapons in the part of the house where Davis was found. Other officers

testified that no clumps of hair were found on the bed or in the bedroom. An officer

testified that Aeger was walking “fine” at the crime scene and stepped over Davis’s

body as she walked to an ambulance seeking medical attention.

An agent with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) testified that she met

with Aeger on the morning of December 23, 2013, to document any injuries she

might have. Aeger told the agent where she had been injured, but the agent did not

see any bruising, marks or large clumps of hair missing, though she did feel a “soft

spot” on Aeger’s head. GBI testing revealed that Aeger’s blood-alcohol level was

5 0.124 “a few” hours after the incident, and that Davis’s blood-alcohol level was

0.164.1

A police investigator with the Vidalia Police Department testified that he

checked the Vidalia Police Department’s computer records for the previous 20 years

and found no domestic violence reports between Aeger and Davis and no incidents

in which the police had been called to the residence. A second police investigator also

checked police records and found no evidence of any prior disputes involving the

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Margaret Aeger v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margaret-aeger-v-state-gactapp-2020.