Pruitt v. State

373 S.E.2d 192, 258 Ga. 583, 1988 Ga. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 20, 1988
Docket45491
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 373 S.E.2d 192 (Pruitt 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
Pruitt v. State, 373 S.E.2d 192, 258 Ga. 583, 1988 Ga. LEXIS 420 (Ga. 1988).

Opinion

Smith, Justice.

Mark Anthony Pruitt was convicted by a jury of murder, rape, kidnapping with bodily injury, aggravated sodomy and aggravated assault. The crime occurred in Montgomery County but venue was changed to Pulaski County. See OCGA § 17-7-150. Pruitt was sentenced to death for the murder. 1

1. Pruitt lived with his half-brother Charles Loyd in a small trailer next door to Donnie Gene Walker and his family. Walker’s daughter, Charise, was five years old.

Pruitt and his half-brother spent the afternoon of November 15, 1986 drinking with Donnie Gene’s father and brother. Loyd brought Pruitt home and Pruitt testified that he went to sleep.

Late that afternoon, a nearby neighbor passed by the trailer and saw Pruitt sitting outside with Charise Walker in his lap. Later, another neighbor saw Pruitt carrying the little girl into some nearby woods.

Charise had been told by her father never to leave the yard. When he noticed she was missing, he called together his pastor, his friends and his neighbors and they began to search for the girl.

By now it was dark. Pruitt was seen exiting the woods, alone, wearing only a shirt. Donnie Gene Walker confronted him behind the trailer, and asked him if he had seen his daughter. Pruitt answered, “No, I don’t do that kind of stuff.” He explained that he had gone into the woods to use the bathroom and had lost his pants. (There was testimony that the trailer was without water.)

Walker left to search the woods for his daughter. The trailer was locked, so Pruitt climbed in through the back window and was putting on his pants when another member of the search party came up to the window to talk to Pruitt. He held on to Pruitt’s arm while Pruitt’s half-brother unlocked the trailer. Pruitt was asked again about the girl. He denied any knowledge of her disappearance, and claimed now that he had entered the woods to masturbate, and had lost his pants in the darkness. There was blood on his shirt, his hands, and his sex organ. He took off the shirt and gave it to one of the members of the search party.

Meanwhile, other members of the search party were in the woods, *584 searching with flashlights. They spotted her clothes first, “hanging from a briar about twenty or thirty feet” from a place where “the leaves and all [on the ground] had been torn up.”

William Sharpe described her location:

She was kinda in a thicket like, with briars and bushes.... It looked like her clothes were thrown in and she was thrown in behind them.

At this point, she was still alive, although horribly injured. Danny Watts testified:

When I got to the woods there was about four or five men standing around the little girl. I got between them — I got on my knees where she was at. She had blood running out of both ears. She had blood running out of her mouth and nose. She had been beaten up around the head. Her leg had a bone sticking up — not sticking through the skin but it was sticking up, you could see a big lump there.
... I tried to keep the blood from running out of her ears. I kept wiping it. It was coming out of her mouth and nose. I kept wiping her, and the paramedics finally arrived.

Charise was taken to the hospital, but she died from her injuries. Dr. Larry Howard performed the autopsy. Her anus and her vagina had been penetrated by something consistent in size and shape with a male sex organ. Both the vaginal and the anal tracts were lacerated internally. Her leg was broken, and her face bore a pattern lesion that was “highly suggestive” of having been caused by a belt buckle. Her whole head had been subjected to “severe impact injury and her skull was fractured in two places.” Dr. Howard testified that Charise died as the result of injuries to the head.

Pruitt was interrogated by law enforcement officers after his arrest. He admitted taking the girl into the woods and attempting to have sex with her but claimed that because of her small size he was unsuccessful. He admitted hitting her with his fist when she began screaming. At trial he claimed that he could not remember any of the events of the evening, and that his custodial statements were lies based on information supplied to him by others.

The evidence supports the conviction on all counts. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). 2

*585 2. The commitment hearing was conducted before a Montgomery County magistrate on November 21, 1986. After the state rested, the defendant attempted to present the testimony of eleven state’s witnesses, claiming a right to “fish all we want for the evidence.” The state objected, stating:

[D]efense counsel has indicated that he has no . . . witnesses that would be relevant to this court’s determination [of probable cause], that all he is on is a fishing expedition, and, therefore we would move this court to rule that probable cause has been established and bind him over to the Superior Court ....

The magistrate agreed, and committed the defendant. Three days later Pruitt was indicted. He thereafter filed a motion in the trial court seeking a “complete” commitment hearing. The motion was denied as moot, since Pruitt had by now been indicted. The trial court did not err. “It is now well settled that errors, if any, in a preliminary hearing will not, in and of themselves, afford grounds for relief when the defendant is subsequently indicted by a grand jury. [Cits.]” Walker v. State, 144 Ga. App. 838 (242 SE2d 753) (1978).

Moreover, OCGA § 17-7-23 (a) provides:

The duty of a court of inquiry is simply to determine whether there is sufficient reason to suspect the guilt of the accused and to require him to appear and answer before the court competent to try him. Whenever such probable cause exists, it is the duty of the court to commit. [Emphasis supplied.]

There is no general right to discovery in a criminal case, Castell v. State, 250 Ga. 776, 782 (301 SE2d 234) (1983), and nothing in OCGA § 17-7-28 creates one, see Day v. State, 237 Ga. 538, 539 (228 SE2d 913) (1976), or authorizes the defendant to go on a “fishing expedition” for evidence concededly beyond the scope of the real purpose of the commitment hearing. There was no error in the commitment hearing.

3. The trial court did not err by denying Pruitt’s motion to suppress. Pruitt had no legitimate expectation of privacy in the articles of clothing he left in the woods. Oliver v. United States, 466 U. S. 170

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Bluebook (online)
373 S.E.2d 192, 258 Ga. 583, 1988 Ga. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pruitt-v-state-ga-1988.