State v. Towns

307 Ga. 351
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 2019
DocketS19A0557
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 307 Ga. 351 (State v. Towns) 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
State v. Towns, 307 Ga. 351 (Ga. 2019).

Opinion

307 Ga. 351 FINAL COPY

S19A0557. THE STATE v. TOWNS.

BLACKWELL, Justice.

On March 16, 2015, a Telfair County grand jury indicted

Ronnie Adrian Towns, charging him with murder and armed

robbery. Two years later, Towns filed a motion to dismiss the

indictment, alleging that the grand jury was unlawfully constituted

because some of the grand jurors were not selected randomly.

Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court agreed that two of

the grand jurors were not selected randomly, and it dismissed the

indictment. The State appeals,1 and we affirm.2

1 The State brought this appeal pursuant to OCGA § 5-7-1 (a) (1), which

authorizes the State to appeal from “an order, decision, or judgment setting aside or dismissing any indictment[.]”

2 Towns also moved to dismiss the indictment on another ground — he

claimed that the master jury list for Telfair County is not sufficiently inclusive of certain populations and is not, therefore, representative of the county as a whole — but the trial court rejected that alternative ground. In its brief to this Court, the State asks us to review not only the ruling that led the trial court to dismiss the indictment — its determination that some of the grand jurors were not selected randomly — but also its rejection of the alternative ground. The 1. The record shows that 50 prospective jurors were summoned

to appear at 8:50 a.m. on March 16 for service on the grand jury.

Fewer than 16 prospective grand jurors, however, appeared on time

and ready to serve. Half of the summoned jurors had been excused

or had been given deferrals. The others simply did not show up.

Because the presence of 16 jurors is essential to empanel a grand

jury, see OCGA § 15-12-61 (a), the presiding judge directed the

sheriff to attempt to locate the jurors who had failed to appear.

Unsure whether the efforts of the sheriff would prove successful, the

presiding judge also directed the clerk to supplement the number of

prospective grand jurors with persons who had been summoned to

appear for service as petit jurors, a procedure that is authorized by

OCGA § 15-12-66.1.

State, however, has no standing to complain on appeal about a ruling that in no way aggrieved the State. See Brown v. City of Atlanta, 66 Ga. 71, 76 (1) (1880) (“When a plaintiff in error brings a case here he must show error which has hurt him. This court is not an expounder of theoretical law, but it administers practical law, and corrects only such errors as have practically wronged the complaining party.”). See also Hamilton State Bank v. Nelson, 296 Ga. 572, 573 (769 SE2d 317) (2015) (where alleged error “could not have harmed” appellant, appellant “cannot be heard to complain about [it]”). Towns has not sought appellate review of the rejection of his inclusivity claim, and we decline to review it at the behest of the State in this appeal. 2 One hundred and fifty prospective jurors had been summoned

to appear on the following day for service as petit jurors. With the

assistance of her chief deputy, the clerk examined the list of

prospective petit jurors, identified four possible candidates for

service on the grand jury, and reached out to those four prospective

petit jurors. Two were unavailable to report on March 16. But the

other two prospective petit jurors — T. S. and B. W. — were

available and agreed to report immediately for service on the grand

jury.

By the time T. S. and B. W. reported, several of those

summoned for service on the grand jury who initially failed to report

had appeared, on their own or at the behest of the sheriff. Having

secured the attendance of 23 prospective grand jurors — 21 jurors

originally summoned for service on the grand jury, plus T. S. and

B.W. — the trial court empaneled the grand jury on March 16. T.S.

was chosen as the foreperson. That same day, 22 of the grand jurors

— including both T. S. and B. W. — heard the evidence against

3 Towns, and the grand jury returned a true bill of indictment.3

Towns filed a motion to dismiss the indictment, alleging that

T. S. and B. W. were not chosen at random to serve on the grand

jury. The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing in August

2018, at which the clerk and chief deputy clerk both testified. The

clerk explained that, when asked to select some persons summoned

for service as petit jurors to supplement the number of persons

available to serve on the grand jury, she based her selections on her

assessments of whether she already had the information necessary

to readily make contact with particular prospective jurors and

whether the prospective jurors likely would be available to report

immediately. Those assessments were predicated on the personal

knowledge of the clerk and her staff. T. S. was known to the chief

deputy clerk because he had appeared at the courthouse on the

morning of March 16 to seek a deferral of his service as a petit juror,

telling the chief deputy clerk that he had a conflict on March 17. B.

3 It appears that one of the empaneled grand jurors is related to Towns

and did not, therefore, participate in the consideration of his case. 4 W., on the other hand, was previously known to the clerk as a local

businessman. The clerk knew how to contact both T. S. and B. W.,

and based on her knowledge of their circumstances, she believed

that both might be available to report immediately for service on the

grand jury.

Following the hearing, the trial court found that neither T. S.

nor B. W. was chosen at random to serve on the grand jury:

While the Clerk of Court did not have any nefarious intent in selecting [T. S.] and [B. W.] . . . to serve on the grand jury, her reasoning of selecting those individuals that she knew, could contact quickly, and who were most likely available to serve[ ] did have the effect of destroying the randomness of the grand jury. While both [T. S.] and [B. W.] were randomly selected from the master jury list for inclusion on the traverse jury list, they were not randomly selected to serve on the grand jury. The Clerk of Court chose [T. S.] and [B. W.] purposefully and not at random . ...

Based on these findings, the trial court granted the motion to

dismiss the indictment, and the State appeals.

2. As we noted earlier, OCGA § 15-12-66.1 authorizes a court

to select persons who have been summoned for service as petit jurors

to supplement the number of persons summoned to appear for

5 service on the grand jury when necessary to secure the attendance

of enough jurors to empanel a grand jury. Section 15-12-66.1

requires, however, that the petit jurors selected to serve on the

grand jury be chosen randomly:

When from challenge or from any other cause there are not a sufficient number of persons in attendance to complete the empaneling of grand jurors, the presiding judge shall order the clerk to choose at random from the names of persons summoned as trial jurors a sufficient number of prospective grand jurors necessary to complete the grand jury. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
307 Ga. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-towns-ga-2019.