Woods v. State

239 S.E.2d 786, 240 Ga. 265, 1977 Ga. LEXIS 1469
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 1, 1977
Docket32621
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 239 S.E.2d 786 (Woods 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
Woods v. State, 239 S.E.2d 786, 240 Ga. 265, 1977 Ga. LEXIS 1469 (Ga. 1977).

Opinion

Undercofler, Presiding Justice.

Dessie X. Woods and Cheryl Todd were tried jointly under a single indictment charging them in two counts of the murder and armed robbery of Ronnie Horne in Wheeler County on June 16,1975. The death penalty was not sought. The record and transcript of trial shows the case was heavily publicized. Under these circumstances, the trial judge took extraordinary precautions to assure a fair trial. By stipulation of counsel, made an order of the court, almost unlimited discovery was permitted to appellant, the state giving counsel all statements made by appellant during and following arrest; permitting the defense to hear the full contents of tape recordings made by the defendants at the time of interrogation following arrest, and giving defense copies of all investigative reports and crime lab reports in its files. When state witnesses were reluctant to talk to defense counsel, the court ordered the state to notify these witnesses they should feel free to discuss the case with counsel. The court ordered the state crime laboratory to make available to defense counsel all exhibits which the state had forwarded to that agency for examination and report. To assure inadvertent waiver of objections did not occur during the trial of the case, the court issued a standing order that all objections made by defense counsel during ten pre-trial hearings on over 50 motions would be considered as continuing throughout trial of the case, and *266 granted a motion by counsel for appellant that all objections previously entered by counsel for Cheryl Todd be considered as having also been made in behalf of the appellant.

Early in the proceedings, the court stated that each motion made would be heard fully on the merits, all evidence entered and argument heard, and that an independent ruling on each motion would be made. Many other measures were taken by the court including the postponement of the trial upon motion of counsel several times and agreement to the severance of the trial of the co-defendants (which was later re-consolidated upon motion by the state acting upon a request from counsel for appellant.) Finally, venue of the trial was changed from Wheeler County to Telfair County and thence to Pulaski County where a trial jury was selected after extensive voir dire composed of six white females, five black females, and one black male. Following trial, this jury found Dessie Woods guilty of voluntary manslaughter and armed robbery and found co-defendant Cheryl Todd guilty of theft by taking. Appellant presented no evidence and did not testify. Cheryl Todd did testify in her own defense. Following conviction, appellant was sentenced to concurrent sentences of 10 years for voluntary manslaughter and 12 years for armed robbery. Cheryl Todd was sentenced to one and one-half years for theft by taking. Appellant appeals her convictions to this court. Todd’s appeal is now before the Court of Appeals.

This case initially came to this court for review on January 13, 1977, and was docketed as Case No. 32056. However, the transcript, consisting of 2,487 pages, was not complete, and upon motion to remand, the appeal was stricken from the record. It was re-docketed as Case No. 32621 on June 23, 1977, and submitted again for review on August 5,1977. By order of March 30,1977, this court affirmed the denial of bond by the trial court on submission of a "motion for bail and stay of mandate pending appeal,” there being a showing at that hearing that appellant had attempted to escape following sentence. By order of September 1,1977, this court denied a motion to substitute counsel on appeal; permitted additional counsel requested by appellant to join in the *267 appeal as co-counsel, and denied a motion by the Attorney General to dismiss one of the two briefs submitted by these counsel.

A motion to remand the case to the Court of Appeals, still pending, is denied. Counsel , on appeal have filed 20 enumerations of error, many of which overlap; consequently they are treated together in this opinion. Following a careful reading of the entire record and transcript of trial, we affirm.

Statement of the Case

The state presented evidence that appellant, with co-defendant, Cheryl Todd, was hitchhiking back to Atlanta from Reidsville where they had been to visit Cheryl Todd’s brother. In Lyons, Georgia, Ronnie Home picked them up. He drove them toward Frank’s Kountry Kitchen located on Highway 280 in Wheeler County. Home contacted by radio one Royce Yawn, a fellow official of the auto insurance company with whom he had been working during the day, and told him to meet him to pick up some renewal forms and "that he had something he wanted to show him.” Yawn arrived and saw the two women in the front seat of Horne’s car. They drove to Frank’s Kountry Kitchen where Horne stayed in his car, Yawn entered the restaurant after the two women where he bought a soft drink and returned to his car. Home joined him there and they each had a drink of whiskey and sorted out renewals. The women had ordered somé food and went to the rest room where they finished drinking the contents of two bottles of wine they had with them. The evidence showed Yawn was visibly under the influence of alcohol when he entered the restaurant and that he and Home had been drinking during the day.

After leaving the restaurant, Cheryl Todd attempted to get into Royce Yawn’s car because "she thought there was supposed to be a party,” but was directed by Horne to get in his car if she wanted to ride. Home left with the women on a road leading away from Atlanta. Yawn followed shortly thereafter, soon coming upon the two women standing in the road where they explained Home had become abusive, wanted to take them into the woods "to party,” and that Cheryl Todd had felt Home’s gun on the front seat beside her and demanded they be let out of *268 the car. Yawn took the women back to the restaurant where they decided to continue to hitchhike to Atlanta. Yawn looked for Horne, met him returning to the restaurant, and was told by Home that he had "taken the wrong road” and that the girls had demanded they be let out. Yawn stated he told Home "he had better go on home . .left him and proceeded to his home in Vidalia. The state introduced a tape of appellant’s interrogation following her arrest in which she stated that Horne again approached them as they were walking down the highway, apologized, and persuaded them he would take them as far as he was going toward Atlanta. They entered the car, appellant in the middle on the front seat, and upon reaching an unmarked, paved county road, a shortcut to 1-16, appellant stated Horne again became abusive, wanted to party with them, then told them to "get out of the car.” She said she saw him reaching for his gun and knew he was a "hit man” sent to kill them, and she grabbed the gun in a struggle with him and killed him. Then she took his money and pistol and together with Cheryl Todd, they ran down the road, attempting to hitchhike to Atlanta. There they said they planned to turn over the pistol and the money to authorities and tell them what happened. The state proceeded upon a theory of murder and armed robbery. The appellant pleaded self-defense.

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.E.2d 786, 240 Ga. 265, 1977 Ga. LEXIS 1469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-state-ga-1977.