Sears v. State

782 S.E.2d 259, 298 Ga. 400, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 1, 2016
DocketS15A1618
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 782 S.E.2d 259 (Sears 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
Sears v. State, 782 S.E.2d 259, 298 Ga. 400, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 99 (Ga. 2016).

Opinion

NAHMIAS, Justice.

Appellant Kevin Sears was convicted of malice murder for the shooting death of William Preston Cowart and aggravated assault *401 with a deadly weapon against Cowart’s fiancée, Nancy Lorinda Hilliard. Appellant was also charged with simple assault against Bridget Cowart (Bridget), who was Appellant’s girlfriend and Cow-art’s niece, but the jury acquitted Appellant of that charge. Appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions and that there was a fatal variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proof at trial with respect to the aggravated assault charge. We affirm. 1

1. (a) Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdicts, the evidence at trial showed the following. On Saturday night, June 25, 2011, Appellant and Bridget went out drinking with Cowart and Hilliard. As the night went on, the two couples split up, with Bridget driving Appellant in her car to a party at his sister’s house and Cowart driving Hilliard in Hilliard’s SUV to a different party. Appellant’s sister later asked him to leave her house because he was being rowdy.

Appellant and Bridget had made plans with Cowart and Hilliard to meet back up at a convenience store. On the way there, Appellant and Bridget began arguing, because Appellant wanted to drive. Appellant, who had been smoking marijuana that evening in addition to drinking, tried to grab the steering wheel from Bridget, and she punched him hard in the mouth. Bridget stopped at the convenience store to wait for Cowart and Hilliard, but then decided to take Appellant to the house where he lived with his mother. Appellant and *402 Bridget rode in silence to his house, except for when Bridget told him that she was going to come inside only to use the bathroom and then leave.

As Cowart and Hilliard were arriving at the convenience store, they saw Bridget speed out of the parking lot in the direction of Appellant’s house. Concerned, they drove to Appellant’s house, where Cowart sent a text message to Bridget saying that he was outside and also honked the horn several times. There was no response, however, and the house was dark, so Cowart and Hilliard decided to drive home. Meanwhile, inside the house, Appellant and Bridget were arguing again and had begun physically fighting. Appellant told Bridget that he was going to kill her, and she managed to text the word “Help” to Cowart’s cell phone. Cowart turned around and returned to Appellant’s house, arriving within a few minutes.

Cowart parked the SUV in Appellant’s driveway next to Bridget’s car, left the keys in the ignition and the headlights on, and ran up the front steps and into the house with Hilliard. They could hear Bridget screaming, and they followed the screams to Appellant’s bedroom in the back, where they found Appellant and Bridget fighting on the bed. Cowart intervened, and Bridget got up and ran past him and Hilliard into the hallway. Appellant tried to get up to go after Bridget, but Cowart pushed him back down on the bed, and the two men began fighting. Appellant put Cowart into a headlock and started choking him. Hilliard was afraid that Appellant was going to choke Cowart to death, so she punched Appellant hard in the face several times, knocking out one of his front teeth. At that point, Appellant released Cowart, who got up and said “let’s go.” Bridget ran out of the house, followed by Hilliard and then Cowart.

Appellant got up, grabbed his deer rifle, and chased after them. When Appellant reached the front porch, Bridget was in her car and had started backing out of the driveway, Cowart was getting into the driver’s seat of the SUV, and Hilliard had her hand on the handle of the front passenger-side door. Hilliard saw Appellant exit the house, stop on the front steps, and point the rifle toward her and Cowart. She then heard Appellant fire a single shot and dropped to the ground beside the SUV to avoid being hit. While on the ground, Hilliard could see Appellant’s feet, and she watched as he walked quickly to the driver’s side of the SUV and used the bolt-action rifle to fire four shots through the open door into Cowart, killing him. After the last shot was fired, Appellant walked up to Cowart and began punching Cowart in the face with his right hand while holding the rifle to his side with his left hand.

Appellant then walked around to the rear of the SUV. Just then, Appellant’s mother pulled her car into the driveway and parked along *403 the driver’s side of the SUV. Appellant jumped up on the hood of her car, began hitting the windshield, and then knocked out the front driver-side door window. While Appellant was attacking his mother’s car, Hilliard got up, saw Cowart slumped over the steering wheel in the SUV, and ran to the trailer behind Appellant’s house to get help. Appellant calmed down, took his riñe inside the house and laid it on his mother’s bed, came back outside, and leaned up against the back of his mother’s car.

Two neighbors awakened by the gunfire had told their wives to call 911; they called across the street to Appellant to see if they could check on the man in the SUV. Appellant said that would be okay and that he no longer had the rifle. The two men walked across the street and introduced themselves to Appellant, who appeared to be calm. Appellant repeatedly said that there was no need to check on Cowart because he was dead, and that Appellant had shot him with a rifle.

By this point, Bridget had come back and parked her car across the street from Appellant’s house. She was yelling, “Oh, my God; he’s been shot; he’s been shot,” and Appellant was yelling across the street to her, “this is your fault; this is all your damn fault.... I told you if you called him I was going to kill the m*****f*****.’’ When sheriff’s deputies arrived at the scene a short time later, Appellant admitted that he shot Cowart.

An autopsy revealed that Cowart had bruising on his head and four gunshot wounds to his head, neck, left arm, and chest, each of which would have been fatal and one of which struck him in the heart and caused his death immediately. A firearms examiner confirmed that projectiles removed from Cowart’s body and four shell casings found on the ground beside the SUV were fired from Appellant’s rifle, which was recovered from his mother’s bedroom.

(b) Appellant contends that the evidence was legally insufficient to support his conviction for malice murder and showed that he was guilty only of voluntary manslaughter. When viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the evidence presented at trial and summarized above authorized the jury to find that after Cowart helped Bridget escape her fight with Appellant and tried to leave with her, Appellant began fighting with Cowart, putting him in a headlock and choking him until Hilliard punched Appellant in the face to get him to release Cowart. Cowart immediately got up, said “let’s go,” ran out of the house behind Bridget and Hilliard, and got into the driver’s seat of Hilliard’s SUV to leave. Instead of allowing Cowart and the two women to drive away, Appellant got up from his bed, grabbed his deer rifle, and chased after them, stopping on his front steps to fire a shot toward the SUV.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robinson v. State
Supreme Court of Georgia, 2025
Hatney v. State
841 S.E.2d 702 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2020)
Stork v. State
303 Ga. 21 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2018)
Dawson v. State
794 S.E.2d 132 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
782 S.E.2d 259, 298 Ga. 400, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-v-state-ga-2016.