Willie Lewis Burns v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 13, 2017
DocketA17A0333
StatusPublished

This text of Willie Lewis Burns v. State (Willie Lewis Burns 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
Willie Lewis Burns v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., BRANCH and BETHEL, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 27, 2017

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A17A0333. BURNS v. THE STATE.

BRANCH, Judge.

Following a jury trial, Willie Lewis Burns was convicted in DeKalb County

Superior Court of aggravated assault and theft by receiving stolen property. Burns

now appeals from the denial of his motion for a new trial on the charge of aggravated

assault, asserting that his lawyer’s failure to request an instruction regarding the

requirement that accomplice testimony be corroborated constituted ineffective

assistance of counsel. Burns further contends that the trial court committed plain error

when, after instructing the jury that the testimony of a single witness was sufficient

to support a conviction, it failed to further instruct jurors that the testimony of an

accomplice must be corroborated. We agree with Burns that he received ineffective assistance of counsel, and we therefore reverse the order denying Burns’s motion for

new trial as to the aggravated assault charge.1

Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, Martinez v. State, 306

Ga. App. 512, 514 (702 SE2d 747) (2010), the record shows that this case arises out

of the efforts of Burns and his co-defendant, Jarvorris Palmer, to sell a car. Burns and

Palmer were tried together and at trial both stipulated that the car, a white Dodge

Charger, was a stolen vehicle to which they did not hold title. On the morning of

August 16, 2011, Burns and Palmer drove the car to meet with the victim, who had

expressed an interest in buying it. After some negotiations, Burns and Palmer drove

the victim in the Dodge Charger to the victim’s bank so that he could withdraw cash

for the purchase of the vehicle. The victim went into the bank first, and Burns and

Palmer followed a short time later. All three men were observed in the bank by a loan

officer and the bank manager, and images of all three men were captured by the

bank’s video recording system and were introduced into evidence at trial. After the

victim completed his cash withdrawal, the men left the bank and returned to the car,

which was parked in front of the manager’s office window. Both the bank manager

1 Burns has not challenged his conviction on the charge of theft by receiving, and we therefore affirm his conviction on that count of the indictment.

2 and the loan officer then witnessed the men engaging in what appeared to be a heated

argument regarding paperwork that either Burns or Palmer was holding.2 All three

men then got into the car, with the victim getting into the backseat, and drove to a

parking lot a short distance away. Approximately five minutes later, the bank

manager left the bank and was walking towards her car when she heard what she

believed was a gunshot. When the manager looked towards the sound of the shot, she

saw the victim running and being pursued by the man who had been seated on the

front passenger side of the car. The manager heard an additional three or four

gunshots, and it appeared to her that the man pursuing the victim was shooting at him.

As the manager watched, she saw the victim jump into oncoming traffic, saw the man

pursuing him leave the scene and jump the fence surrounding a nearby apartment

complex, and observed that the Dodge Charger had been driven away from area.

The only other witness to the shooting was a repairman who had been working

on an air-conditioning unit located on the roof of a nearby restaurant. After hearing

a gunshot, the repairman looked towards the sound and saw a man exiting a white

Dodge Charger holding a pistol and shooting at a second man. The repairman

2 During his testimony at trial, Palmer acknowledged that the papers were fake documents (including a fake car title) he “had . . . drawn up” to help facilitate the sale of the stolen vehicle.

3 describe the shooter as dark-skinned with dreadlocks, and wearing a white shirt and

baggy jeans.3 According to the repairman, the car and driver fled the scene as the

shooter ran away on foot.

Emergency personnel responded to the scene and discovered the victim

suffering from a gunshot wound to the abdomen. Less than an hour after the incident,

police located Burns and Palmer at an apartment complex within walking distance of

the area where the shooting occurred. The Dodge Charger was found parked in the

lot at the same apartment complex. Police then conducted a show-up with both the

bank manager and the loan officer, each of whom positively identified Burns and

Palmer as the men they had seen in the bank with the victim. Additionally, the victim

subsequently identified Burns and Palmer from two photographic lineups as the men

who had assaulted and attempted to rob him.

After Burns and Palmer were taken into police custody, Palmer gave police a

statement in which he identified Burns as the shooter. . The police obtained arrest

warrants for both men based on Palmer’s statement, and Burns and Palmer were

thereafter indicted jointly on charges of kidnapping with bodily injury, armed

3 The record shows that neither Burns nor Palmer had dreadlocks at the time of the crime, and at trial, the repairman could not identify either Burns or Palmer at trial as the shooter.

4 robbery, aggravated assault, aggravated battery, and theft by receiving stolen

property. With respect to the charge of aggravated assault, the indictment alleged that

Burns and Palmer “individually and as parties [to] the commission of a crime . . . did

make an assault upon [the victim] with a handgun, a deadly weapon.”

At trial, there was conflicting evidence as to the identity of the shooter.

According to the victim, both Burns and Palmer shot at him at some point. Although

the victim’s testimony on this issue was confusing and at times self-contradictory,

parts of that testimony indicated that Palmer was the man shooting at the victim as he

attempted to flee from the car. Additionally, the bank manager positively identified

Palmer as the shooter. The bank manager also noted that the shooter had been on the

passenger side of the car, and in his testimony the victim stated that Burns was the

driver. Furthermore, both the bank manager and the repairman described the shooter

as wearing a white T-shirt and baggy blue pants or jeans, and the still photo taken

from the video of the men inside the bank shows Burns wearing clothes matching that

description.

Palmer testified in his own defense and stated that he had agreed to help Burns

sell a car both men knew was stolen, identified Burns as the shooter, and denied

participating in the aggravated assault. Palmer acknowledged that when the incident

5 began, Burns was driving the car and he was the person seated in the front passenger

seat. But Palmer insisted that despite the bank manager’s unequivocal identification

of the front seat passenger as the shooter (and despite her identification of Palmer as

both the front seat passenger and the shooter), it was Burns who had committed the

assault against the victim. Specifically, Palmer stated that when the victim decided

not to purchase the car, Burns pulled a gun from underneath the driver’s seat and fired

a shot towards the victim.

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Bluebook (online)
Willie Lewis Burns v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willie-lewis-burns-v-state-gactapp-2017.