John W. Davis,
Maloy & Jenkins, W. Bruce Maloy, James K. Jenkins,
for appellant.
The appellant, Jimmy Fletcher
Meders, was convicted in Glynn County of malice
murder and armed robbery. He was sentenced to death.
Meders spent the afternoon and
evening of October 13, 1987, in the company of three
other men: his employer, Randy Harris; Harris'
cousin Bill Arnold; and a friend of the latter, Greg
Creel. The four began drinking that afternoon and
continued drinking into the evening. Harris
eventually parted company with the other three to
entertain a teenage girl in a motel room. Meders and
the other two borrowed Harris' car and spent a few
hours bar-hopping.
At 2:30 a.m., Creel stated he was
hungry. They stopped at a convenience store. Arnold
stayed in the car, while Creel and Meders entered
the store. Creel went to the back of the store to
warm a package of sausage-biscuits in the microwave
oven. Meanwhile, Meders made a small purchase. When
the cashier opened the register, Meders shot him in
the chest with a .38 caliber revolver. The victim
hit the wall and fell to the floor. Meders then shot
him again, in the head.
Creel ran out of the store to the
car when the first shot was fired, leaving his food
behind. After removing the money from the cash
drawer (and triggering a silent alarm in the process),
Meders joined the other two before they could leave
without him. They drove to a trailer park, where
Arnold and Creel got out. After offering the other
two a share of the take -- which they declined --
Meders left them and drove to Harris' motel room. He
woke Harris and told him he had "just blowed a man's
head off over thirty-eight dollars."
Meders was soon arrested. Some of
the "bait" money from the store, whose serial
numbers had been recorded, was found in Meders'
wallet after he was arrested. Seventeen food stamps
were found in the pocket of his coat. The murder
weapon was found under the mattress of his waterbed.
The evidence, reviewed in the
light most favorable to the verdict, supports the
conviction. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99
SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979). [1]
1. Before trial, Meders' attorney
filed a motion seeking funds for an examination by a
"private psychiatrist, psychologist or other medical
expert to determine his sanity at the time of the
alleged offenses with which he is charged and his
ability to aid his attorneys in his defense." Meders,
testifying personally at the hearing on this motion,
contended he had a nervous breakdown on November 12,
1988 (slightly more than a year after his arrest).
He saw a doctor who prescribed medicine for
depression and anxiety. He testified that he was
worried about his wife and children and his personal
life, and was concerned about "the circumstances of
what I am facing . . . I don't know what is going to
happen in this case." He understood that the purpose
of the hearing was to see if the judge was going to
"grant a private or a state physician." He testified
on cross-examination that he knew the difference
between right and wrong and that he had no problem
communicating with his attorneys. His cross-examination
ended as follows:
Q. (By the State): . . . I want
to make sure I understand the position you are
taking. The fact that you have been over to Mental
Health and talked to those folks, that has helped
you some, is that right, would that be fair to say?
A. Really the only way it has
helped me is he give me a medication to make me
sleep.
Q. Okay, and what you are asking
the court to do is appoint a psychiatrist to treat
you in terms of the depression you are having and
the anxiety and you are asking for a private one
rather than a state-sponsored one?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Okay, . . . you are not
incompetent, are you?
A. No, sir, not really.
The defendant was the only
witness. Arguing that psychiatrists employed by the
state are unfit, Meders' attorney asked the court to
authorize a "private psychiatrist to conduct a
diagnostic examination of the defendant." The court
declined to award funds for a private psychiatrist
but authorized an evaluation by "one of the
psychiatrists on the state staff."
Nothing further was raised on
this issue until after the jury was selected. During
a Unified Appeal Procedure hearing before any
evidence was presented, Meders' attorney reminded
the court of his motion for psychiatric examination,
and told the court he had not yet heard from the
psychiatrist. Both the court and the state had
received a copy of the psychiatrist's report. The
court asked the defendant's attorney if he would "like
to take a minute to read that right now?" The
defendant's attorney responded:
Mr. Davis [for the defendant]:
Well, I would just like to ask Mr. Johnson, it would
serve, serve my purpose to just, if he would state
in his place, does the copy state, or does the
report, rather, state that the defendant is compos
mentis, that he is, that he is able to stand trial?
Mr. Johnson [for the state]: As I
understand the report, Your Honor, it does say quite
a bit, but boiling it down to the, the two main
points, it does say that he is competent to stand
trial at this time and it appears that he was
competent at the time the act was, that the act
occurred. So, but I will, we have gone to have that
xeroxed right now, and we will give it to Mr. Davis
before we leave right now.
Mr. Davis: Well, that serves my
purpose, Your Honor.
The foregoing is all the record
shows about the contents of the report.
(a) Meders concedes he did not
file a plea of incompetence to stand trial. See OCGA
17-7-130. However, relying on such cases
as Pate v. Robinson, 383 U. S. 375 (86 SC 836, 15
LE2d 815) (1966); Holloway v. State,
257 Ga. 620 (361 SE2d 794) (1987); and
Baker v. State, 250 Ga. 187 (297
SE2d 9) (1982); he contends the trial
court should have conducted a hearing sua sponte to
determine his competence to stand trial. We do not
agree.
The defendant's testimony and the
court-ordered evaluation show that he understood "the
nature and object of the proceedings against him and
is capable of assisting his attorney with his
defense." Brown v. State, 250 Ga. 66, 70 (295 SE2d 727)
(1982). The trial court did not err by failing to
conduct further investigation on this issue sua
sponte.
(b) Meders also contends the
trial court's refusal to grant funds for an
independent psychiatrist was error. He relies on Ake
v. Oklahoma, 470 U. S. 68 (105 SC 1087, 84 LE2d 53)
(1985) to support his contention that he was
entitled to an independent psychiatrist. This
reliance is misplaced. Ake's pre-trial behavior was
so bizarre the trial court ordered an evaluation sua
sponte. The examining psychiatrist reported that Ake
was delusional and was probably a paranoid
schizophrenic. After further evaluation, it was
determined that Ake was not competent to stand trial.
However, after several weeks of treatment and
medication, Ake stabilized enough that he was able
to stand trial. Notwithstanding Ake's severe mental
problems, the State of Oklahoma denied him
psychiatric assistance on the issue of sanity at the
time of the crime. The U. S. Supreme Court reversed
his conviction, holding that Ake had demonstrated "his
sanity at the time of the offense [would] be a
significant factor at trial," and was entitled to
independent psychiatric assistance.
In this case, by contrast,
neither the defendant nor his attorneys reported any
difficulty communicating with each other. The
defendant himself testified that he was not
incompetent, and although he was depressed at the
prospect of being executed, nothing about his
behavior could be characterized as bizarre. Unlike
Ake, Meders was evaluated on the issue of sanity and
the examiner found him to have been sane at the time
of the crime as well as competent to stand trial.
Nothing before the court reasonably indicated that
Meders' sanity would be a significant factor at
trial. Hence, the trial court did not err by
refusing to provide funds for an independent
psychiatrist. Thomas v. Jones, 891 F2d 1500 (C)
(11th Cir. 1990).
2. On December 14, 1981, the
judges of the Brunswick Judicial Circuit approved
and published a rule of court establishing a plan
for the selection of jurors by electronic means
pursuant to OCGA 15-12-42. The plan set out the procedures to be followed
by the jury commissioners and the clerk of court to
compile the lists of grand and traverse jurors, to
update the lists, and to draw grand jurors and
traverse jury venires. The Data Processing Center of
Glynn County was designated a "necessary component"
of the plan, and given the responsibility for
storing the lists on "magnetic computer tape," for
programming the computer to randomly select names
from the lists when called upon to do so by a judge
of the superior court, and for furnishing printouts
of the lists and of the jurors selected from those
lists.
On March 1, 1989, Meders filed a
"motion to quash the indictment," alleging the
indictment was null and void because the grand jury
which returned it was not selected according to the
1981 rule of court establishing the plan by which
jurors were to be selected.
The evidence presented on the
motion showed that after February 1987, the Data
Processing Center was relieved of its
responsibilities for jury data storage and retrieval
(for reasons not appearing on the record), its
computer tapes were given to the clerk of superior
court, and the data was programmed into a UNISYS
computer system that was set up in the clerk's
office. Although the Data Processing Center no
longer played any role in the maintenance of the
jury lists or in the selection of jurors from the
lists, the procedures followed were essentially the
same under the new system with one exception:
Under the original system,
selection of grand jurors and of traverse jury
venires was completely random; under the new system,
selection of jurors was random except that the
UNISYS system was programmed to select grand juries
and traverse jury venires that would have the same
racial composition as the lists from which the
selection occurred. In other words, as appellant
argues, under the new system, "Glynn County carried
the requirement of fair representation to the
selection of the venire," not just the master lists.
(a) In Pollard v. State,
251 Ga. 84 (3) (303 SE2d 106) (1983) with
Franklin v. State, 245 Ga. 141 (1)
(263 SE2d 666) (1980).
The cases cited by both parties
are somewhat off the mark here. In this case, there
has been no violation of the statutes per se.
Nothing in OCGA 15-12-40 or 15-12-42
forbids the clerk from maintaining and operating in
the clerk's office the electronic equipment used to
store and retrieve the jury data. Nor do these code
sections forbid programming the jury-selection
computer to racially balance the venires it selects.
Hence, under the statutes, the judges of the Glynn
County Superior Court could have filed a new plan
incorporating the changes in procedures since the
original plan was filed. See OCGA 15-12-42 (b) (2) (D) and (b) (4) (D).
In fact, they could have done so
in response to the very motion filed in this case
which is the subject of this enumeration of error.
In any event, however, what is complained of here is
a lack of compliance with a trial court directive.
As we stated in Hightower v. State,
259 Ga. 770, 771 (2) (386 SE2d 509) (1989), "the enforcement of its directives is a
matter committed primarily to the trial court's
sound exercise of discretion." As far as any alleged
non-compliance with the plan is concerned, we do not
find an abuse of discretion necessitating reversal.
(b) The defendant also contends
it is unconstitutional to ensure that venires have
the same racial balance as the lists from which they
are chosen. He likens the Glynn County jury
selection procedure to the minority set-aside plan
found unconstitutional by the U. S. Supreme Court in
City of Richmond v. J. A. Croson Co., 488 U. S. ____
(109 SC 706, 102 LE2d 854) (1989). The
constitutional issue was not raised below and is
therefore not preserved for appeal.
(c) Nevertheless, although we
do not agree with the defendant's suggestion that
the present Glynn County selection procedure alters
the odds that a person on the jury list will be
selected for a particular venire, [2] we do not
recommend manipulating the jury selection process.
[Rather than] to structure each
jury [venire,] . . . [t]he logical, and desirable,
way to impanel an impartial and representative jury
-- and the method chosen by Congress -- is to put
together a complete list of eligible jurors and
select randomly from it, on the assumption that the
laws of statistics will produce representative
juries most of the time. This approach safeguards
the selection process from possible manipulation and
ensures the independence of the jury.
J. Van Dyke, Jury Selection
Procedures 18 (1977). (Emphasis supplied.) (Quoted
in Holland v. Illinois, 493 U. S. ---- (110 SC ----,
107 LE2d 905) (1990) (Stevens, J., dissenting (fn.
10)). Accord Larmon v. State, 256 Ga. 228 (345 SE2d 587) (1986). See also Parks v. State,
254 Ga. 403, 412-413 (fn. 5) (330
SE2d 686) (1985).
3. Absent any objection by the
defendant the court did not err by admitting the
contents of the defendant's wallet in evidence.
4. The defendant did not object
at trial to the prosecutor's closing argument and,
having reviewed the complaints he now makes on
appeal, we conclude the prosecutor's arguments did
not result in the death sentence being imposed under
the influence of passion, prejudice, or other
arbitrary factor. Kinsman v. State,
259 Ga. 89 (11) (376 SE2d 845) (1989).
5. At a conference conducted
outside the presence of the jury pursuant to the
Unified Appeal Procedure, the defendant stated that
certain defense witnesses who could have
corroborated his testimony could not be located
because he had only four days notice of the trial.
In view of the many pre-trial hearings and the
length of time that elapsed between the arrest and
the trial, it is difficult to credit the defendant's
claim that he did not have notice of the date of the
trial or sufficient time to locate witnesses
essential to his case. In any event, the court gave
the defendant an opportunity to perfect the record.
Thus, the defendant was not, as he claims, denied a
hearing on this issue.
6. There was no error in the
admission in evidence of material and relevant
photographs of the victim. Hicks v. State,
256 Ga. 715 (13) (352 SE2d 762) (1987).
7. There was no error in the
admission of the defendant's pretrial statements.
See, e.g., Parks v. State, 254 Ga.
403 (1) (330 SE2d 686) (1985).
8. That three grand jurors
allegedly knew the defendant and did not like him
provides no ground for reversal. Pitts v. State,
259 Ga. 745 (1) (386 SE2d 351) (1989).
9. We do not agree that the
Unified Appeal Procedure is unconstitutional on its
face, or as applied in this case. Isaacs v. State,
259 Ga. 717 (7) (386 SE2d 316) (1989);
Sliger v. State, 248 Ga. 316 (282
SE2d 291) (1981).
10. Appellate counsel did not
represent Meders at trial or on the motion for new
trial, and have become involved in this case only
since it was docketed in this court on appeal. The
state contends the defendant's present attorneys
have raised questions about the effectiveness of
trial counsel and ask us to remand the case to the
trial court for a hearing on this issue. The
defendant's attorneys deny having raised this issue
and contend it should not be and, under our
decisions cannot be, considered by us. See, e.g.,
Cohran v. Carlin, 254 Ga. 580 (1 a) (331 SE2d 523)
(1985).
We note that Meders has asked for
a remand on the issue of his competence to stand
trial, appellant's brief at p. 13, and, in
enumeration of error B, contends he was denied
"assistance of counsel" (albeit in the context of a
claimed denial of expert assistance). Moreover, he
raises a number of issues that were not raised or
not objected to below. We agree with the state that
the defendant's brief at least injects a concern
about the issue of effectiveness.
We have held that, where the
issue of effectiveness is raised for the first time
on appeal by an appellate attorney who did not
represent the defendant at trial or on motion for
new trial and who did not file an amended motion for
new trial, a remand for hearing on the issue of
effectiveness may be appropriate. Johnson v. State,
259 Ga. 428 (3) (383 SE2d 115) (1989).
Moreover, the Unified Appeal Procedure provides:
At any time after the case is
docketed in the Supreme Court, the Superior Court
may be directed by the Supreme Court to conduct
further hearings, or to hold additional conferences
for specified purposes, or to make additional
findings of facts or conclusions of law in respect
to issues raised by the parties on appeal or
perceived by the Supreme Court although not asserted
by the defendant or the state.
Rule IV (B) (1) of the UAP, Ga.
Court & Bar Rules at 9-15.
The question of effectiveness
will likely have to be addressed at some point, and
we see no reason not to do it now. We therefore
grant the state's request for a remand to give
defendant an opportunity to litigate this issue. If
it is necessary to appoint counsel to represent the
defendant on remand, the court shall do so. [3] See
Amadeo v. State, 259 Ga. 469 (384
SE2d 181) (1989). After the conclusion of
the proceedings on remand, the case shall be
returned to this court for review of the proceedings
on remand and for the sentence review, unless the
result of such proceedings obviates the need for
further appellate review.
Glenn Thomas, Jr., District
Attorney, John B. Johnson III, Assistant District
Attorney, Michael J. Bowers, Attorney General,
Leonora Grant, Joseph L. Chambers, for appellee.
1990
Notes:
1. The crime was committed early
in the morning of October 14, 1987. Meders was
arrested later that day. He was indicted on December
16, 1987. The trial began on April 3, 1989, and
ended on April 7, 1989. A motion for new trial was
filed on April 24, 1989. The motion was heard on May
30, 1989, and denied June 8, 1989. The record was
docketed in this court on June 22, 1989. After
extensions of time were granted to the parties, the
case was argued orally on October 10, 1989.
2. Assume a jury list of 1,000
persons, of whom 80% are white and 20% are black. If
the computer is instructed randomly to select one
hundred persons for a jury venire, then the odds
that any one person is selected are 100/1000 or 1 in
10. If the list is broken down into two groups, one
composed of 800 whites and the other of 200 blacks,
and the computer randomly selects 80 of the 800 and
20 of the 200 (which, in essence, is what happens in
Glynn County), then a white person on the list has
80 chances in 800--or 1 in 10--of being selected,
while a black person has 20 chances in 200--or 1 in
10--of being selected.
3. The record before us does not
show by what manner the defendant's present
attorneys were retained to represent him, nor does
it disclose the scope of their agreement to
represent. We therefore can express no opinion at
this juncture about what obligation, if any, they
have to represent the defendant at the hearing on
remand.