Mitchell v. State

467 S.E.2d 503, 266 Ga. 197, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 440, 1996 Ga. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 5, 1996
DocketS95A1432
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 467 S.E.2d 503 (Mitchell 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
Mitchell v. State, 467 S.E.2d 503, 266 Ga. 197, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 440, 1996 Ga. LEXIS 52 (Ga. 1996).

Opinion

Sears, Justice.

The appellant, Michael Steven Mitchell, was indicted for three crimes relating to the death of Danny Hucks. Count 1 of the indictment charged Mitchell with the malice murder of Hucks; Count 2 charged him for the felony murder of Hucks, with aggravated assault as the underlying felony; and Count 3 charged him with the possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime. On the malice murder count, the jury found Mitchell guilty of voluntary manslaughter. On the felony murder and possession of a firearm counts, the jury found Mitchell guilty of the crimes charged. The trial court merged the voluntary manslaughter conviction with the felony murder conviction and sentenced Mitchell to life in prison for felony murder and to a term of five constecutive years for the offense of possession of a fire *198 arm during the commission of a crime. 1 Mitchell appeals, contending that the principles of Edge v. State 2 , require that we reverse the conviction for felony murder. We agree and remand for sentencing on the conviction for voluntary manslaughter.

1. The evidence at trial demonstrated that Mitchell and Hucks were involved with the same woman, Melissa Clark, for a number of years before the homicide. Clark testified that she had known Mitchell since they were freshmen in high school and that they dated from 1989 until late 1990 when they agreed to stop dating and to just remain friends. She met Hucks in May 1991, and started dating him shortly thereafter. She stated that she continued to see Mitchell and other high school friends initially, but that after she and Hucks had been dating awhile, Hucks became extremely jealous of her other friends and forbad her to see them. She added that Hucks destroyed her pictures of Mitchell. As an example of Hucks’s extreme jealousy, Clark testified about an incident that occurred when Hucks and his grandmother came to pick up Clark to go to his grandmother’s house. According to Clark, while driving there, Hucks opened the car door, pushed Clark’s face out the door, and held her face close to the passing pavement, accusing her of being with someone the night before because he had not been able to reach her by phone. When they arrived at Hucks’s grandmother’s house, Hucks began heating safety pins with a lighter and telling Clark that he was going to push them under her fingernails. Clark started to cry, and Hucks put down the safety pins, got a pillow and started to suffocate her. Clark testified that Hucks’s grandmother heard her crying and came to his room and told him to stop mistreating her; that she told his grandmother that she wanted to go home; and that Hucks then said, “you’re not going anywhere.” At that point, Hucks’s grandmother threatened to call the police and reached for the phone, but Hucks pulled it out of the wall. Hucks’s grandmother then hit Hucks with the phone, and Hucks reacted by stating “Hit me; I like it. You can’t hurt me.” Hucks’s grandmother then told Hucks to get out of the house, and he began dragging Clark through the trailer park. Hucks’s grandmother, however, caught up with them and told Hucks that she had called the police. He then ran off, and Hucks’s grandmother took Clark home.

After she broke off her relationship with Hucks, his jealousy con *199 tinued. One day he came into her yard and started accusing her of being with someone else. He tried to grab her, but she ran into her house and closed the door. Clark stated that Hucks then pushed open the door, dragged her out of the house by her hair, and put her in a car. Hucks then began hitting her in the face, popping one of her eardrums. According to Clark, Hucks told her that “ T have a gun under the seat,’ ” and “ ‘I’m going to kill you; there’s a pond down the road and I’m going to dump you in that pond.’ ” Clark testified that Hucks then drove past the pond, pulled into the woods, and started yelling that “ ‘you’ve been with someone else.’ ” Clark denied it, and Hucks started punching her in the stomach, slapping and hitting her in the face, choking her, and slamming her head against the door over and over.

A friend of Clark testified that at a party he had completely funded, he and Clark went to the back of the house so that Clark could get some money and contribute to the costs. When they came back to the front of the house, Hucks told Clark’s friend that Hucks wanted to fight him. Clark’s friend said that he would not fight him, and Hucks slapped him in the face. The two then went outside and started fighting. Clark’s friend pinned Hucks, then let him up, and went inside the house. Hucks came back in the house and insisted on fighting again. Clark’s friend said no, and Hucks grabbed a knife from a kitchen table, sliced it across Hucks’s arm, and threw blood on Clark’s friend. Clark’s friend decided that he should leave the party to avoid any further confrontation and did so.

In December 1993, Hucks went to prison, and Clark moved in with Steven Mitchell. Clark testified that Hucks then wrote a letter to her and Mitchell stating that “he better not catch Mitchell out of the neighborhood; he was going to get him.” The day that Hucks got out of prison, he called Clark and Mitchell. Clark told him that she did not want to talk with him, that she was dating Mitchell. Hucks stated, “ ‘No, you’re not, you’re mine so no one else can have you.’ ” Hucks threatened to kill both Clark and Mitchell. According to Clark, Hucks stated that

he was going to break in the house and get one of our butcher knives out of kitchen, come sit on the edge of the bed, and then dare us to move. And he said whenever one of us moved he said he was going to kill that person and make the other one watch and then kill them last. I said, Danny, I was going to call the police. He said, call the police. He said, “I’ll be in there and kill the both of you and be gone before they can get there.”

*200 Clark stated that Hucks’s phone calls went on for a week, and that she, Mitchell, and her parents went to the police to swear out a warrant on Hucks, but that they were told that they could not take out a warrant based on threats. Clark testified that over several months Hucks continued to call her and Mitchell repeatedly and threaten Mitchell in particular by stating that he (Hucks) was going to get Mitchell. Clark testified that about the first of October, she and Mitchell broke up for a few days; that Hucks found out about it; and told her that he wanted her to come see him. She added that she did so in the hope that “if I just did what he wanted that everything would be okay.” She stated that she went to Hucks’s house and did what he wanted, which was to have sex. According to Clark, she and Mitchell then got back together, making Hucks angry.

Shortly thereafter, on October 2, 1994, Clark had some friends, including Steven Mitchell, Gerald Buckaloo, Tammy Murdock, Kyle Spell, and Steven’s brother, Jeff, come to her house. According to Mitchell and Clark, Hucks made repeated phone calls to the house. Mitchell testified that on one occasion he answered the phone and that Hucks told him, “I’m going to kill you, you pussy son of a bitch, put [Clark] on the God damned phone.” Mitchell told Hucks that he and Clark had gotten back together and that Clark wanted Hucks to stop calling her.

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635 S.E.2d 772 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2006)
Mitchell v. State
593 S.E.2d 388 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2004)
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527 S.E.2d 556 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2000)
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485 S.E.2d 780 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1997)
Smith v. State
477 S.E.2d 827 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
467 S.E.2d 503, 266 Ga. 197, 96 Fulton County D. Rep. 440, 1996 Ga. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-state-ga-1996.