State v. Williams

887 S.E.2d 285, 316 Ga. 249
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 2, 2023
DocketS23A0420
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 887 S.E.2d 285 (State v. Williams) 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. Williams, 887 S.E.2d 285, 316 Ga. 249 (Ga. 2023).

Opinion

316 Ga. 249 FINAL COPY

S23A0420. THE STATE v. WILLIAMS.

ELLINGTON, Justice.

In connection with the shooting death of Sandra Fields in her

home on March 28, 2021, Michael Williams was indicted in Telfair

County on two counts of felony murder, burglary in the first degree,

aggravated assault, possession of a firearm during the commission

of a felony, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The

State filed notice of its intent to introduce evidence of other wrongs,

crimes, or acts pursuant to OCGA § 24-4-404 (b) (“Rule 404 (b)”). The

State specified that the other-acts evidence would be offered as

evidence of Williams’s motive and intent in killing Fields and would

include Williams’s January 2017 arrest for family violence battery

against another woman, Sommer Sheffield. After a hearing, the trial

court ruled that evidence of the 2017 battery was inadmissible, on

the basis that the probative value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by undue prejudice. The State appeals the ruling

pursuant to OCGA § 5-7-1 (a) (5), contending that the trial court

misapplied the applicable balancing test and abused its discretion

in excluding evidence of Williams’s prior act of domestic violence.

For the reasons explained below, we vacate the trial court’s ruling

and remand for the trial court to reconsider the matter under the

proper framework.1

In arguing that evidence of the 2017 battery should be

admitted in this case, the prosecutor stated that the State expected

the evidence to show that, on March 28, 2021, Fields, who was in a

sexual relationship with Williams, asked him to leave her home

prior to the shooting and that he refused to do so and engaged in a

physical struggle with her, which ended in her being shot and killed.

The prosecutor also expected the evidence to show that there was a

history of conflict between Williams and Fields and that in the past

he had damaged her phone, which he used as “a mechanism of

1 We note that the appealed order contained rulings on multiple evidentiary matters. Only the Rule 404 (b) ruling is at issue in this appeal; the remainder of the court’s order is unaffected. 2 control” in their relationship. Based on Williams’s pretrial

statements about Fields’s death, the State expected Williams to

deny any intent to harm Fields, as specified in the predicate counts

of aggravated assault and burglary, and to rely on a theory of

accident and lack of intent as his main defense.2 The State argued

that Sheffield’s testimony about the 2017 battery, including that

Williams smashed her phone when she tried to call 911, would help

in establishing motive, intent, and lack of accident.3

2 In Williams’s pretrial statements, he claimed that he and Fields argued

at her home about a pickup truck; she told him to leave and went to her bedroom, leaving the door open. Williams stated that, before leaving the house, he needed to retrieve his blood pressure medication and went into Fields’s bedroom where he found her standing at the end of the bed, holding a gun. Williams stated that Fields “racked a bullet” and pointed the gun at him with her finger on the trigger, and that, acting only to defend himself, he grabbed her right hand and the gun with his left hand, they struggled, and then the gun went off. Williams stated that the bullet grazed his head, and Fields immediately dropped to the ground. Williams stated that his vision was obscured by blood pouring down his face, and he did not realize at first that Fields had also been hit by the bullet. Williams stated Fields’s grandchildren came out of their bedroom after the single shot was fired. In his appellate brief, Williams likewise claims that Fields brandished a gun when he went to get his medication from the bedroom, and the gun discharged as they struggled over it. 3 See Harrison v. State, 310 Ga. 862, 868 (3) (855 SE2d 546) (2021)

(Where the defendant claimed a fatal shooting was an accident, and there was no direct evidence, aside from the defendant’s own account, of how the shooting transpired, evidence that the defendant had a history of committing jealousy-

3 At a pretrial hearing on the admissibility of Williams’s 2017

arrest for family violence battery, Sheffield testified as follows. For

about eight months beginning in 2016 and ending in January 2017,

she was in a sexual relationship with Williams, who was married at

the time. Williams rented a house for Sheffield, and he stayed there

with her sometimes. They smoked crack cocaine together. Three or

four times during their relationship, they had “really bad

argument[s]” about money and drugs. She described Williams as

being mentally abusive, calling her “crack head and whore and stuff

like that.” Sheffield also described Williams as being “very

controlling,” and she was not “allowed to leave the house unless [she]

notified him.” She testified that he gave her drugs “to make [her]

stay [at home] while he wasn’t there.” She testified that she violated

his rule about staying home only once, “and it caused a big fight”

fueled violent acts against a romantic partner had significant probative value in establishing that his conduct in the charged offenses was intentional and not accidental.); Thompson v. State, 308 Ga. 854, 858-860 (2) (843 SE2d 794) (2020) (Where the defendant’s intent to commit aggravated assault against the victim, the predicate felony for felony murder, was an issue at trial because he claimed that the victim’s injuries resulted from accidental falls, evidence that the defendant committed violent acts against the victim and other family members was probative of lack of accident in the charged offenses.). 4 and “a big uproar.” Sheffield left to get food, and Williams arrived

while she was away. When she returned to the house, Williams “was

mad[,] and he took the food and threw it out the door and [was] very

mad about that[,] and [they] started fighting.” She told him to leave

the home, but he did not leave, and the fight became physical.

Sheffield “jumped on the bed” and dialed 911. “[A]s [she] was talking

to dispatch[,] [she] got tackled into the wall[.] . . . [Williams] just

shattered [her] phone.” She was transported to the hospital where

she was diagnosed with “a fractured eye socket and multiple

fractures of [her] face.” No other witnesses testified during the

other-acts portion of the pretrial motions hearing.

After the hearing, the trial court ruled that

[t]he prior incident has similarities to the charged offense[s,] including a domestic dispute with a partner wherein [Williams] was requested to leave [the home], did not leave, and a physical altercation ensued. Pursuant to OCGA § 24-4-40[4] (b), the prior incident provides proof of motive and intent thus providing evidence relevant to an issue other than [Williams’s] character.

The trial court ruled that evidence of the 2017 battery was

inadmissible, however, on the basis that Sheffield’s testimony

5 “regarding the domestic violence incident was intrinsically linked to

[her] testimony regarding [Williams’s] drug use and affair” and

therefore “the probative value of [Sheffield’s] testimony [was]

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887 S.E.2d 285, 316 Ga. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-ga-2023.