McClain v. State

689 S.E.2d 126, 301 Ga. App. 844, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 117, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 5, 2010
DocketA09A2310
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 689 S.E.2d 126 (McClain 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
McClain v. State, 689 S.E.2d 126, 301 Ga. App. 844, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 117, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 4 (Ga. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

A jury found William L. McClain guilty of: (i) theft by taking a motorcycle; (ii) theft by taking a helmet and leather jacket; (iii) theft by taking a truck; and (iv) giving false identification to a law enforcement officer. He appeals his theft convictions on general grounds and maintains that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance. We affirm.

The state’s evidence showed that, on the morning of August 17, 2007, it was discovered that a motorcycle, helmet, and leather jacket had been stolen from a residential garage during the preceding night. The house was located in LaGrange; the garage was “half closed”; and the key was in the motorcycle’s ignition.

Within about a week, the Troup County Sheriffs Office discovered the motorcycle parked in woods behind a motel located in *845 LaGrange, the Stay Lodge Inn. The helmet was on the ground beside the motorcycle, but neither the key nor the leather jacket was in the vicinity. The jacket turned up several days later, however. A man known in the area as “Shorty” had offered it for sale for $20 at a local tire shop, located a few miles from where the motorcycle and helmet were retrieved.

Meanwhile, and seemingly unrelated at the time, the Troup County Sheriffs Office received a tip on August 22, 2007 about a suspected stolen vehicle. The tipster described it as a blue Dodge Ram 1500 truck, provided the vehicle’s tag number, and reported that the truck was parked at the Stay Lodge Inn in LaGrange. The tipster further provided the motel room number of the man he had seen driving and parking the truck there. A sheriffs office deputy went to the motel and ascertained that a blue Dodge Ram truck in the parking lot was one that had been reported stolen. About two weeks earlier, the truck had been taken from a truck stop in Tallapoosa, Haralson County. As with the circumstances underlying the motorcycle theft, the truck had been parked, then left unattended with the key in its ignition.

A sheriffs office deputy knocked on the door of the specified motel room. McClain, and the woman with whom he was staying, were inside. When asked what he knew about the truck in question, then parked about 25 meters away, and further asked to identify himself, McClain stated that he had no knowledge of the truck, and he gave the officer a false name. During the course of the investigation at the motel, McClain was arrested.

The motel room was searched for the key to the truck’s ignition, but it was not found. The truck was also searched, and a key was found stashed in a man’s boot located in the truck. The key did not operate the truck’s ignition, but it was discovered later that the key operated the ignition of the stolen motorcycle.

The state presented several witnesses who tied McClain to the truck and to the motorcycle. The woman who had been with McClain in the motel room testified that, during at least the week before McClain’s arrest, she had seen him every day. She testified that McClain had been the only person she had seen driving the truck, that she had seen him driving the truck “a couple of times a day,” and that she had seen him drive the motorcycle “maybe twice.” The woman did not know of any job McClain had at the time, but recalled that McClain had told her that his father was purchasing the truck for him.

The motel’s maintenance man identified McClain as the only person he had seen driving the truck. He testified that McClain had driven the truck more than a dozen times and as recently as the day before McClain’s arrest.

*846 Another individual who had been residing at the Stay Lodge Inn during that time also identified McClain as the driver of the truck. He recalled seeing McClain driving the truck on many occasions. He testified that he had never seen anyone else driving it. He further recalled McClain driving a motorcycle that was sometimes parked at the motel.

In addition, the state called as a witness a neighbor of the motorcycle owner. He testified that, at about 10:00 on the night the motorcycle was stolen, he arrived home and noted as suspicious a blue Dodge truck parked alongside their residential street. When he drove into his own driveway, the truck’s headlights illuminated, and the truck slowly drove away.

McClain was the sole defense witness. Contrary to his earlier denial to a law enforcement officer, he admitted at trial that he had been driving the truck. He also admitted that he had been driving the motorcycle and wearing the helmet. He denied knowing, however, that these items were stolen property; and he claimed that he had never seen the leather jacket.

McClain testified that, around the time in question, he had recently been released from prison and was on parole for theft, had been fired from two jobs, and thus had relocated from Marietta to LaGrange because he had heard that there were jobs available there. The day after he arrived, the truck at issue stopped at the Stay Lodge Inn where he was then living. Its driver, a man named “Shorty,” offered to sell McClain a TV and other electronic items. McClain declined. Although he had never met Shorty before then, McClain drove with him that same day to wash the truck. Thereafter, he saw Shorty every day; and on numerous occasions, Shorty gave McClain the truck key and allowed him to drive the truck to various places. McClain testified that Shorty also came to the motel with the motorcycle at issue; McClain admitted driving it to the carwash and claimed that Shorty had supplied him also with the stolen helmet.

McClain denied telling the woman in the motel room that the truck was his and that his father was making payments on it. He testified that he never had exclusive control over the stolen vehicles; that Shorty kept the keys to both the truck and the motorcycle; and that the sheriffs office deputies had not found the key to the truck’s ignition during the search of the motel room because Shorty had it.

1. McClain challenges the evidence pertaining to his three theft convictions. When an appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction, “the relevant question is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential *847 elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” 1

McClain points out that there was no testimony from anyone who had seen him take the truck, motorcycle, helmet, or the leather jacket. He asserts that the state’s evidence did not place him in Haralson County, where the truck was stolen. He cites evidence, including his own testimony, that he claims showed that those items had been taken by Shorty and that he had not known that those items were stolen. According to McClain, the state’s case failed to exclude explanations other than his guilt.

A jury is not required to believe a defendant’s testimony, nor to disbelieve the state’s witnesses. 2 Even where the case is based upon circumstantial evidence, “it is not necessary that the circumstantial evidence exclude every other hypothesis except that of guilt, but only reasonable inferences and hypotheses.” 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
689 S.E.2d 126, 301 Ga. App. 844, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 117, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclain-v-state-gactapp-2010.