Mussman v. State

697 S.E.2d 902, 304 Ga. App. 808, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 2393, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 616
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 6, 2010
DocketA10A0607
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 697 S.E.2d 902 (Mussman 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
Mussman v. State, 697 S.E.2d 902, 304 Ga. App. 808, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 2393, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 616 (Ga. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

Aron Mussman appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence or dismiss the indictment against him for vehicular homicide following a single-car accident during which the other occupant died. He argues that the State violated OCGA § 17-5-56 (a) and his due process rights by failing to preserve constitutionally material evidence that he needed to defend himself, which was the vehicle from which the State acquired the evidence it intends to use against him. He further contends the State acted in bad faith by failing to preserve the evidence and by waiting for six months to inform him that he was a suspect. Because we find that the State violated the statute requiring it to preserve physical evidence from which it obtained biological material, and acted in bad faith by failing to preserve constitutionally material evidence, the trial court erred and we reverse.

On October 9, 2007, Mussman was involved in a single-car accident in which the other occupant of the car, Daniel Stephens, died of blunt force trauma to his head and chest.1 The accident occurred when the car, a Mazda Miata convertible, slid counterclockwise and rolled, landing upside down. After examining the positions of the seat belts at the scene, the investigating police officer concluded that the passenger had been wearing a seat belt but the driver had not been wearing one. In his preliminary report, the officer said Mussman, who was not injured, had been the passenger and Stephens had been driving. Mussman was questioned and released from the scene with no indication he was suspected of criminal activity.

The police impounded the car, photographed it, and removed samples of biological evidence from the interior. On October 29, 2007, without notice of the contemplated criminal charges against Mussman, the State released the car to a towing service. Mussman’s father contacted the car’s insurer, and the company paid Mussman for the total loss. About three weeks later, Mussman gave the police a statement, and again received no indication he was suspected of a [809]*809crime. The father testified that he and Mussman never considered preserving or maintaining the car themselves because they had no idea Mussman would be charged with anything related to the accident and would need evidence from the vehicle for his defense.

In April 2008, six-and-a-half months after the collision and approximately six months after the State released the vehicle, the investigating officer obtained a warrant for Mussman’s arrest. In July 2008, Mussman was indicted for homicide by vehicle, accused of causing Stephens’ death by recklessly speeding and failing to maintain his lane. His attorney immediately hired an investigator to find the car, which had been purchased by a salvage wholesaler. The investigator determined that the salvager sold the car in January 2008 to a mechanic in Quebec, who cleaned, repaired, repainted, and resold the vehicle, thus rendering it useless for purposes of an independent examination.

Mussman moved to dismiss the indictment and suppress any evidence the State obtained in violation of his constitutionally guaranteed right to examine critical evidence to be used against him. He argues that the State acted in bad faith by failing to maintain the car or inform him that he was a suspect before releasing the car. At a hearing on the motion, the officer admitted that law enforcement in Gwinnett County only keep cars in vehicular homicide cases they consider “unsolved.” Once they “solve” a case, they release the car. Here, the investigating officer examined the vehicle first at the scene, then at the impound lot two days later, then a third time with the county medical examiner the next day. The officer took multiple photographs of the car’s interior and exterior, selecting views he thought were “appropriate.”

The medical examiner testified that Stephens, who was 6' 2" and 147 pounds, had sustained numerous injuries in the crash, including multiple bruises, scrapes, broken facial bones and skull fractures. The left side of his head was flattened; he had mud in his mouth; and he had sustained an injury on the right back side of his head. The medical examiner looked at Stephens’ clothing but did not see anything that she thought had any evidentiary value, although she did not know if the clothing had been cut at the hospital or torn during the wreck. The clothing was not photographed or saved.

Both the State and Mussman agree that the car’s passenger had been wearing a seat belt and the driver had not been. The medical examiner and the investigating officer concluded that the pattern of an injury on the back of Stephens’ head appeared to be “consistent with” a hinge located on the convertible top behind the passenger seat. This match led them to believe that Stephens had been the seat-belted passenger and Mussman had been the unbelted driver. The medical examiner saw no marks indicating that Stephens had [810]*810been wearing a seat belt, however, and a hospital nurse told the investigating officer that Stephens bore no obvious signs he had been wearing a seat belt. The record contains no photographs of Stephens’ body. A crime scene investigator recovered blood and hair from the hinge on the convertible top and sent it to the crime lab for DNA testing. The testing ultimately confirmed that the biological material came from Stephens, which is not surprising considering that Mussman was not injured in the wreck.

Mussman’s expert, a certified automobile accident investigator, disagreed with the conclusion of the medical examiner and the investigating officer that Stephens had been the passenger. He testified that without access to the car itself, however, critical evidence was missing that would have corroborated his conclusion that Stephens had been driving. For example, he said, when a car rolls, an unbelted occupant becomes a “loose free object” inside the car and can strike multiple interior sites. The expert could see various stains on the interior of the driver’s side door from the pictures, but could not identify what they were without a physical examination. He could not identify other interior marks from the State’s pictures. An interior inspection of the car itself would have allowed him to examine the stains he could see in the pictures and any other marks made by hands, fingers, or other body parts, as well as imprints or transferences of thread, color, or pattern from clothing or shoes, all of which would have given him additional information to establish who had been driving the car. He could see from the pictures that the driver’s seat belt was slightly extended but could not determine why without inspecting the mechanism.

Without a physical examination, the expert was also unable to determine how many times the car had rolled, which would have helped him determine the occupants’ “kinematics,” or trajectory inside the car as it rolled. While the State took multiple pictures of the car’s exterior, the pictures did not show details such as the direction of striation marks in the paint on the hood. Given access to the car, the expert also could have gathered the shattered windshield glass to look for fabric, debris, or biological material.

Regarding the hinge pattern on the back of Stephens’ head, the expert testified that it was unlikely that the head of a seat-belted passenger would have hit a hinge located directly behind and below his seat.

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Related

Mussman v. State
717 S.E.2d 654 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2011)
State v. Mussman
713 S.E.2d 822 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
697 S.E.2d 902, 304 Ga. App. 808, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 2393, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mussman-v-state-gactapp-2010.