McCray v. State

799 S.E.2d 206, 301 Ga. 241
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 17, 2017
DocketS17A0315
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 799 S.E.2d 206 (McCray v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCray v. State, 799 S.E.2d 206, 301 Ga. 241 (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

BENHAM, Justice.

Appellant Don McCray was convicted of murder and other offenses arising out of the shooting death of Darius Grover.1 McCray was apparently jealous of Grover’s relationship with Lashante Holloway, McCray’s former girlfriend. On the evening of the shooting, Grover was visiting Holloway’s apartment when McCray entered the apartment complex and commenced knocking, and then beating, on her door, but Holloway would not answer. Eventually, Holloway spoke to McCray through the locked door and told him to leave. He then commenced calling her repeatedly on the phone, but Holloway refused to answer. Grover became irritated and answered the phone, angrily telling McCray to stop calling and beating on the door. The two men engaged in an argument over the phone. Later, Grover called a friend, Mr. Burton, who lived in the adjacent apartment building with his then-fiancée, and invited him to come over to Holloway’s apartment to play video games.

After Burton arrived, Holloway left to go visit Burton’s fiancée, Ms. Daniel. She believed McCray was gone. When Holloway heard McCray’s voice calling her name and heard him chasing after her, she commenced running toward the other couple’s apartment, and she testified at trial that she was in fear for her life. Holloway then heard McCray banging on other apartment doors and calling her name. Finally, he arrived at the door of the apartment where Holloway had fled, started beating and kicking at the door, and commenced threatening Holloway. Daniel telephoned Burton and told him about the man at her door, and both Burton and Grover ran over to Burton and [242]*242Daniel’s apartment. After a verbal confrontation, McCray started running, and Burton and Grover chased after him. They watched McCray reach his car outside the apartment complex gate, but when McCray opened the driver’s door, McCray drew a gun and pointed it at the other two men, who ran back to Burton’s apartment. According to Burton’s testimony, McCray could have driven away from the scene at that point. When Burton and Grover arrived back at Burton’s apartment, Holloway expressed concern about her young daughter who was alone at her apartment, and Holloway said she wanted to go back to get her. Grover went to the apartment of a friend who lived next door to Burton and Daniel to whom he had given his shotgun and ammunition for safekeeping. That friend returned Grover’s shotgun along with one cartridge. The friend tried to get the men to calm down, but Grover kept saying they had to protect themselves. He declared that no one was going to pull a gun on him over a woman. In McCray’s custodial statement to the authorities, which was videotaped and played to the jury, he admitted that after reaching his car he had followed behind Grover and Burton and hid under the stairs to Burton’s apartment where, he acknowledged, the two men did not see him. Grover told Holloway he would stand watch with the shotgun to protect her as she went to get her daughter, and said that if he saw McCray he was going to “bust him.”

Hearing this statement, McCray came out from his hiding place under the apartment building stairs and opened fire while angrily shouting twice at Grover, “You going to do what?” McCray struck Grover at least six times. Grover returned his one shot, missing McCray and striking the building’s staircase. Some shotgun shell pellets apparently ricocheted and a few of them hit McCray’s arm, but he was otherwise unhurt. An eyewitness who observed these events from her window in another building testified she had not seen Grover point a weapon at anyone when she heard six or seven gunshots and then left her window. Grover died at the scene from multiple gunshot wounds, some of which entered his back. McCray fled the scene, but he turned himself in the next day. In response to questioning after being read his rights, McCray gave conflicting statements, first saying Grover fired the first shot, and then stating that he made the challenging comment to Grover about what Grover was going to do “after I had shot him and he shot me.” After his trial and conviction, McCray filed this appeal.

1. McCray’s sole defense was justification in that he acted in self-defense. In his first two enumerations of error, McCray asserts the evidence was insufficient to convict him of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and also that the State failed to disprove every other reasonable hypothesis except guilt and thus failed to prove guilt [243]*243beyond a reasonable doubt. We note, however, that although the jury found McCray guilty of aggravated assault, he was neither convicted nor sentenced for that offense since the guilty verdict for aggravated assault merged into the guilty verdict for malice murder, and he was convicted and sentenced only for the latter offense. See Culpepper v. State, 289 Ga. 736, 738 (2) (a) (715 SE2d 155) (2011). Consequently, the assertion that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction for aggravated assault is moot. With respect to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction for malice murder, we conclude the evidence was sufficient to authorize a jury to find McCray guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

CitingOCGA §§ 16-3-20 and 16-3-21 (a), however, McCray asserts that he presented sufficient evidence to show justification by establishing that he reasonably believed his actions were necessary to defend himself against Grover. As in any case in which a defendant effectively raises such an affirmative defense, the State in this case had the burden of disproving McCray’s defense of justification and self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt,2 and McCray asserts that the State failed to meet this burden. But where, as here, conflicting evidence was presented regarding whether a defendant acted in self-defense in shooting the victim, the jury is free to reject the evidence in support of self-defense and to accept the evidence that the defendant did not act in self-defense. See Bradford v. State, 299 Ga. 880, 881 (1) (792 SE2d684) (2016); Anthony v. State, 298 Ga. 827, 829 (1) (785 SE2d 277) (2016).

Multiple witnesses testified that McCray came out from his hiding place behind the victim and loudly taunted him as he fired his weapon. Indeed, in the initial statement McCray gave to the authorities, he admitted surreptitiously following the victim and then taunting him as he fired. Several witnesses testified the victim was standing with his back to McCray when shots rang out and before the victim fired a shot. This testimony is consistent with the medical examiner’s testimony about the location of some of the victim’s wounds. It is also consistent with expert testimony that, given the shot pattern from a shotgun, it would be highly improbable that a person who fired a shotgun at another person at such a short range as was involved in this case would miss the target (with the exception here of a few pellets), and that missing the target would be consistent with spinning around and firing the shotgun after having already been struck with a bullet.

[244]*244McCray argues that the evidence demonstrated he had an innocent reason for returning to the apartment building, as he told the officer who interrogated him — to look for his phone, not to pursue the victim — and that the only evidence regarding who was the aggressor in the gun fight was circumstantial.

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Bluebook (online)
799 S.E.2d 206, 301 Ga. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccray-v-state-ga-2017.