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Larry
ROMINE
Larry Romine, 45, was sentenced
to die in April 1982 in Pickens County for the shotgun slayings of his
parents, Roy Lee, 48, and Aville R. Romine, 50. Police say robbery was
the motive for the March 19, 1981, double homicide.
Mr. Romine's death
sentence was reversed by the Georgia Supreme Court in June 1983, but he
was resentenced to death again in August 1985. His federal appeal
challenging the fairness of his trial was filed in 1996.
ROMINE v. THE STATE.
39345.
(251 Ga. 208)
(305 SE2d 93)
(1983)
CLARKE, Justice.
Murder, etc. Pickens Superior Court. Before Judge Mills.
Appellant, Larry Romine, was indicted in Pickens
County for the murder of his parents and the armed robbery of his
mother. His case was tried under the Unified Appeal Procedure. The
jury convicted him on all three counts and recommended that he be
sentenced to death.
1. Appellant and his wife separated a few weeks
prior to the murders. He spent most nights thereafter with Ginger
McEntire. In this and other respects, appellant's lifestyle met with
parental disapproval. After an argument with his father the weekend
before the murders, appellant told Ginger not to worry about it; it
would not go on much longer.
He and Ginger met Thursday, March 19, 1981,
shortly after 6:30 p.m., and spent that night in a motel. The next
morning, appellant told Ginger, "I bet you mama and daddy didn't
work today."
They did not. When appellant's mother, Avilee,
failed to appear Friday morning, members of her carpool called her
home. There was no answer. They contacted Reverend McClure, who
lived nearby, and he entered the house through the open front door.
Inside, he found the bodies of Avilee and appellant's father, Roy.
Roy, whose body lay in the kitchen, had been shot
in the back. Avilee was in the bedroom, shot in the chest. Two .16
gauge shotgun waddings were recovered from the kitchen and bedroom.
They were later identified as having been fired from a shotgun owned
by Ginger McEntire.
Avilee's purse was missing, as was a paycheck she
had received Thursday. On Monday, March 23, appellant was observed
burning the contents of a box in a trash barrel. When law
enforcement officers thereafter searched the trash barrel, they
found a metal tool identical to one used by Avilee in her work, and
a metal frame, rings and zipper that looked like the metal portions
of her coin purse and pocket book. After appellant was arrested
Tuesday, March 24, he asked his wife to retrieve a packet of papers
from his car. She did, and turned it over to the GBI. The packet
contained a $500 certificate of deposit payable to Avilee, her
paycheck of March 19, her savings passbook, and various title and
insurance papers bearing her name or Roy's.
In a statement given to law enforcement officers
Tuesday evening, appellant admitted borrowing Ginger's shotgun,
without her knowledge, on Thursday afternoon. He said that when he
got home, he took two hits of LSD and loaded the gun. Then he walked
the quarter mile from his house to his parents' house. No one was
home and he used his key to enter. Hearing his mother drive up, he
waited for her to enter the bedroom, and then he shot her. He went
into the living room and waited on the couch. The next thing
appellant remembered was hearing his father drive up. (Other
evidence presented at trial indicated that approximately two hours
had elapsed.) Roy entered the house and went to the kitchen,
carrying several sacks of groceries. Appellant shot him and left.
Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of
the evidence with regard to his convictions. However, we have
reviewed the evidence pursuant to Rule IV (B) (2) of the Unified
Appeal Procedure and we conclude that the evidence supports
appellant's convictions for armed robbery and two counts of murder.
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
2. The "first proceeding," contemplated by Rule
11 (A) of the Unified Appeal Procedure, was conducted June 19, 1981.
Motion hearings were thereafter conducted on August 5, September 25
and October 5, 1981. See Rule 11 (B) of the Unified Appeal
Procedure. At the October 5 hearing, appellant's trial, originally
scheduled for October, was continued until the March 1982, term of
court.
On February 10, 1982, appellant filed a motion to
recuse Judge Frank C. Mills III, who had presided over all of the
proceedings in the case. Appellant alleged in his motion that prior
to being named to the bench in February of 1981, Judge Mills had
been the district attorney for seven years; that because of his
prosecutorial experience, Judge Mills was biased against the
appellant; and that his bias was demonstrated by his conduct in
handling the case. In a supporting affidavit appellant alleged:
"Specifically, in the pre-arraignment hearing on
June 19, 1981, during the testimony of Ms. Linda Hames, the
transcript shows that after five brief questions by the District
Attorney, Judge Mills proceeded to ask eighteen questions.
"Further, in the pre-trial hearing held August 5,
1981, Judge Mills, after the District Attorney had completed his
questions of [defense witness] Millard Farmer, engaged the witness
in extensive questioning and argument as to the matters at issue."
The trial court denied appellant's motion to
recuse. Appellant contends in his sixth enumeration that this denial
was error.
In State v. Fleming,
245 Ga. 700 (1) (267 SE2d 207) (1980), this court elected to
follow the federal rule that "when a trial judge in a case pending
in that court is presented with a motion to recuse accompanied by an
affidavit, the judge's duty will be limited to passing upon the
legal sufficiency of the affidavit, and if, assuming all the facts
alleged in the affidavit to be true, recusal would be warranted,
then another judge must be assigned to hear the motion to recuse."
Id. at 702. In Hunnicutt v. Hunnicutt, 248 Ga.
516 (283 SE2d 891) (1981), this court further held that the
motion must not only be legally sufficient, but timely, i.e., made
"as soon as the facts demonstrating the basis for disqualification
become known." Id. at 518.
All the facts alleged as a basis for the
disqualification of Judge Mills were known prior to August 5, 1981.
Appellant filed his motion six months later. Appellant's motion was
untimely and the trial court did not err in denying the motion to
recuse or in denying appellant's request to allow another judge to
hear the motion.
3. In his ninth enumeration of error, appellant
contends the Unified Appeal Procedure is unconstitutional. We do not
agree with appellant's contention that the Unified Appeal Procedure
"forces the trial court out of its traditional role of neutral
overseer, aligning it with the prosecution." His remaining
contentions have been decided adversely to him in Brown v. State,
250 Ga. 66 (3) (295 SE2d 727) (1982)
and Sliger v. State, 248 Ga. 316 (282 SE2d
291) (1981).
4. The trial court did not err by failing to
grant appellant's motion for change of venue. Of the 66 jurors
impaneled, only 11 were excused for bias or prejudice. These 11
jurors constituted 16.7% of the entire panel. This percentage
corroborates the absence of such prejudicial publicity as would
require the grant of a motion for new trial. Messer v. State,
247 Ga. 316 (4) (276 SE2d 15) (1981).
Appellant's eighth enumeration of error is meritless.
5. On July 21, 1981, appellant filed a motion in
which he sought discovery of relationships or other ties to
prospective jurors by law enforcement officers, witnesses and
bailiffs. The motion was granted. The court's order of February 12,
1982, contemplated that interrogatories be submitted to the district
attorney for dissemination by him to witnesses, bailiffs and law
enforcement officers, and that the interrogatories be returned to
the defense prior to voir dire.
A copy of the jury list was mailed to the
appellant and his attorney on February 26, 1982. Appellant
thereafter submitted his interrogatories to the district attorney.
When the voir dire commenced the morning of March 29, the completed
interrogatories had not yet been furnished to appellant because the
district attorney had neglected to disseminate them to anyone.
Appellant moved to continue the case so that the interrogatories
could be furnished prior to voir dire. The motion was denied, but
the trial court ordered that the interrogatories be completed and
furnished to appellant prior to the selection of the jury.
At 8:45 p.m. on the 29th, 45 completed
interrogatories were furnished to appellant. Appellant then made
another motion for continuance so that he could have additional time
to examine the interrogatories. This motion was denied. Voir dire
continued the next day and the jury was selected March 31.
Appellant contends in his fifth enumeration of
error that the trial court erred in denying his motions for
continuance. We cannot agree.
The district attorney should have complied with
the clear terms of the February 12 order. Nonetheless, his failure
to do so was not brought to the court's attention until immediately
before the voir dire was scheduled to begin; the court thereafter
did what it could to enforce compliance with its order, short of
further delaying the case.
The information sought by appellant is ordinarily
obtained from the voir dire of potential jurors. Appellant has
failed to demonstrate that he relied to his detriment on an order
that was discretionary, or that he was harmed by the belated
compliance with the order. Motions for continuance are addressed to
the sound discretion of the trial court. Marshall v. State,
239 Ga. 101 (1) (236 SE2d 58) (1977).
We find no abuse of discretion here.
6. In his seventh enumeration of error, appellant
contends the fast pace of the trial denied him effective assistance
of counsel.
The trial began with voir dire Monday morning and
ended Saturday evening. Court was in session, according to appellant,
until 8:30 p.m. Monday, 9:00 p.m. Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, 7:00
p.m. Thursday, 10:00 p.m. Friday and 5:00 p.m. Saturday.
We note that appellant's attorney was appointed
April 13, 1981, almost a year prior to the trial. His investigation
was aided by a private investigator retained with funds furnished by
the trial court. Counsel was assisted throughout the trial by his
associate.
Except for matters discussed in Division 11,
post, appellant has not shown in what way his attorney would have
been more effective had the case been tried at a slower pace. As to
the guilt phase of the trial, our review of the record convinces us
that appellant had counsel reasonably likely to render and rendering
reasonably effective assistance. Pitts v. Glass,
231 Ga. 638 (203 SE2d 515) (1974).
Sentence Review
7. In our review of the sentence, we address
first a matter not raised on appeal. The jury's written sentence
verdict as to Count 1 (the murder of Avilee Romine) recited, as a
statutory aggravating circumstance: "Armed robbery of said Avilee
Romine." As to Count 3 (the murder of Roy Lee Romine), the verdict
recited, as a statutory aggravating circumstance: "Murder of Avilee
Romine."
The court asked appellant's attorney, "Do you
have any objection as [to] the form of the verdict and the manner in
which it's written on the form, Mr. Thomas?" Counsel replied, "Not
that I'm stating at this time, Your Honor, without waiving any."
Nonetheless, at the district attorney's suggestion, the trial court
dealt with the subject during the poll of the jury. The court asked
each juror if the juror meant by his verdict that, as to Count 1,
the jury found that the offense of murder of Avilee Romine was
committed while the offender was engaged in the commission of the
additional capital felony, the armed robbery of Avilee Romine; and
that, as to Count 3, the jury found that the murder of Roy Lee
Romine was committed while the offender was engaged in the
commission of the additional capital felony, the murder of Avilee
Romine. Each juror responded in the affirmative.
When a jury recommends a death sentence, it must
designate in writing the aggravating circumstance or circumstances
which it has found beyond a reasonable doubt. OCGA
17-10-30 (c) (Code Ann. 27-2534.1).
This written finding should recite all the essential, pertinent
elements of the statutory aggravating circumstances found by the
jury. At a minimum, the jury's intent must be shown with sufficient
clarity that this court can rationally review the jury's finding.
Cf. Godfrey v. Georgia, 446 U. S. 420, 428 (100 SC 1759, 64 LE2d
398) (1980).
We need not decide whether the jury's written
verdict, standing alone, was a sufficient expression of its finding.
The poll of the jury clarified its written finding, and absent any
objection to the form of the jury's verdict, we find no error in the
court's failure to require the jury to amend its written verdict to
reflect more precisely its intent. Cf. Todhunter v. Price,
248 Ga. 411 (1) (283 SE2d 864) (1981).
8. In his first enumeration of error, appellant
contends that the statutory aggravating circumstances found by the
jury may not stand, for several reasons.
First, he contends that as to Count 2, the death
penalty for the murder of Roy Romine cannot be supported by the
murder of Avilee Romine, because the crime and the supporting
circumstance are the same capital felony, i.e., murder. Appellant
contends that the supporting capital felony must be not only a
different capital felony, but a different kind of capital felony,
than the capital felony for which the death penalty is imposed. We
cannot agree. As we have held in the
past, OCGA 17-10-30
(b) (2) (Code Ann. 27-2534.1 (b) (2)) is applicable to multiple
murders. Gilreath v. State, 247 Ga. 814 (16)
(279 SE2d 650) (1981).
Second, appellant contends that since the two
murders in this case were not simultaneous, one was not committed
while the offender was engaged in the commission of the other. We do
not agree that (b) (2) requires simultaneity of action with regard
to the two offenses. Gilreath v. State, supra; Peek v. State,
239 Ga. 422, 431 (238
SE2d 12) (1977). As in Peek, the murders in this case "were
committed by appellant in a relatively short period of time in what
can be fairly viewed as one continuous course of criminal conduct.
Thus, under the facts of this case, the jury was authorized in
finding that the first murder was committed in the course of the
second murder." Ibid.
Finally, appellant contends the evidence is
insufficient to show that the murder of Avilee was committed during
the course of an armed robbery.
The evidence shows the following: Avilee was paid
by check on the afternoon of the day of her death. Less than three
hours later, she was murdered by her son. Within the next few days,
Avilee's paycheck and other papers were found in appellant's
possession and the remains of her pocketbook were found in a trash
barrel in which appellant had burned the contents of a box. The
evidence demonstrates that appellant, "with intent to commit theft,
[took] property of another from the person or the immediate presence
of another by use of an offensive weapon . . ." OCGA
16-8-41 (a) (Code Ann. 26-1902).
From the evidence, the jury was authorized to
find appellant guilty of armed robbery, and to find that the armed
robbery was a statutory aggravating circumstance supporting the
death penalty for Avilee's murder, and this is so regardless of
whether appellant's intent to take Avilee's pocketbook arose before
or after he murdered her. Young v. State, 251
Ga. 153 (303 SE2d 431) (1983).
9. We find that the statutory aggravating
circumstances found by the jury are supported by the evidence beyond
a reasonable doubt. OCGA 17-10-35 (c)
(2) (Code Ann. 27-2537); Jackson v. Virginia, supra.
10. In his fourth enumeration of error, appellant
contends that the sentencing charge was inadequate.
(a) The court charged: "Ladies and gentlemen, you
have found the Defendant Larry Romine guilty of the offenses of
murder. It is now your duty to determine the penalty that shall be
imposed as punishment for those offenses as prescribed by our law.
In arriving at this determination, you are authorized to consider
all of the evidence received here in court as presented by the State
and this Defendant throughout the entire trial. You are authorized
also to consider all the facts and circumstances, if you find there
to be any, in extenuation and mitigation of punishment presented by
the Defendant and shown to you by the evidence in both phases of
this trial."
In Hawes v. State, 240
Ga. 327 (9) at 334 (240 SE2d 833)
(1977), we stated that the "failure to inform the jury that they
were authorized to consider mitigating circumstances . . . was in
contravention . . ." of the requirements of our death penalty law. (Emphasis
supplied.) OCGA 17-10-30 (b) (Code Ann.
27-2534.1 (b)). The charge in this case was not subject to the
defect discussed in Hawes, and there is no merit to appellant's
contention that, under Hawes, the court should have used the word "required"
instead of the word "authorized."
(b) The court charged: "Aggravating circumstances
are those which increase the guilt of the Defendant or the enormity
of the offense or . . . its injurious consequences. Mitigating
circumstances are those which do not constitute a justification or
excuse for the offense in question but which in all fairness and
mercy may be considered as extenuating or reducing the degree of
moral culpability or blame.
[I]f you see fit . . . to recommend mercy for the
Defendant then this recommendation is solely in your discretion and
is not controlled by any rule of law. You may make such
recommendation with or without reason. If this should be your
finding, then the Court is required by law to sentence this
Defendant Larry Romine to life imprisonment. In other words . . . if
you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the State of Georgia has
proved the existence of one or more of the aggravating circumstances
given to you in this charge as to either or both counts, you
nonetheless are not required to recommend that the Defendant Romine
be put to death.
"You may, if you see fit, and this is a matter
entirely in your discretion, provide for a life sentence for the
accused Romine based upon any mitigating circumstances or reasons
satisfactory to you or without reason if you see fit to do so.
"You may recommend life imprisonment even though
you have found the aggravating circumstances given to you in this
charge to have existed beyond a reasonable doubt."
The trial court made it clear to the jury that it
could recommend a life sentence even if it found that the state had
proven the existence of one or more statutory aggravating
circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt. Hawes v. State, supra;
Fleming v. State, 240 Ga. 142 (7) (240 SE2d
37) (1977).
The trial court did not err, as appellant
contends, in failing to specifically instruct the jury that "as to
mitigating circumstances [the jury] could consider anything, without
limitation or definition." The court's instruction conveyed to the
jury that its authority to recommend mercy was unlimited and not
circumscribed by the court's definition of mitigating circumstances.
(c) Appellant contends the court's charge was
deficient because it did not expressly forbid the jury from
considering pre-trial gossip and rumors. We note that appellant
failed to request such a charge. Moreover, the court told the jury:
"You are also authorized to consider all the facts and circumstances,
if you find any, regarding the gravity and the seriousness of the
offense and your knowledge of the personal background of this
Defendant, but only as shown to you by the evidence in both phases
of this trial" (Emphasis supplied.) Appellant's contention is
meritless.
(d) We cannot agree with appellant's contention
that the court's charge was overly suggestive of aggravating
circumstances. The court's charge fully and fairly explained
aggravation, mitigation, the choice to be made between life and
death, and the jury's responsibilities in that regard.
11. For reasons which follow, however, we find
that we must set aside the sentences of death imposed in this case.
Appellant's grandfather, Ralph Romine, had been
subpoenaed and had attended trial until Friday evening, when he left
early because he felt ill. He was instructed to return the next
morning. The jury returned its verdicts of guilty Friday night.
When the sentencing phase of the trial began
Saturday morning, Ralph was absent. His absence was called to the
court's attention by appellant's attorney, who asked for a
continuance "for a period of time sufficient to allow us to
determine the physical condition of Ralph Romine and secure his
attendance at court." Asked for an offer of proof as to what Ralph
would testify, appellant's attorney stated: " . . .Ralph Romine has
come to my office on several occasions . . . [H]e did not want his
grandson electrocuted . . . [H]e had very strong reservations about
it. He tells me that the Lord has dealt with him in that matter and
the taking of the life of his grandson will not bring back his son .
. . He has expressed a tremendous desire to be able to tell the jury
what his wishes are . . ."
Immediately before appellant rested later that
morning, after he had testified on his own behalf, appellant renewed
his motion for continuance. The court asked, "[D]o you have any
indication that it would be a short continuance?" Appellant's
attorney answered, "I do not know, Your Honor."
The court then asked, "[D]o you have anything to
add to your offer of proof, anything that would be admissible . . .
[Y]ou haven't told me anything yet that he would say that would be
admissible. Now, that's what I'm waiting to hear. You're saying that
he would express his wishes that Mr. Romine not get the death
penalty. That would not be admissible." When counsel was unable to
supplement his offer of proof, his renewed motion for continuance
was denied.
At the hearing on appellant's motion for new
trial, the trial court explained its denial of the motion for
continuance: "[T]he only thing that was offered in the nature of
proof was that [Ralph] would testify that he was opposed to the
death penalty for his grandson. And, therefore, on that basis, I
denied your motion for continuance." (Emphasis supplied.)
Appellant contends the denial of his motion for
continuance was error. We agree.
It is clear that the largest factor in the
court's denial of continuance was the court's belief that Ralph's
testimony would not have been admissible in mitigation. This court,
however, has consistently refused to place unnecessary restrictions
on the evidence that can be offered in mitigation at the sentencing
phase of a death penalty case. See, e.g., Brooks v. State,
244 Ga. 574, 584 (261
SE2d 379) (1979); Cobb v. State, 244
Ga. 344 (28) (260 SE2d 60) (1979); Spivey v. State,
241 Ga. 477, 479 (246
SE2d 288) (1979); Brown v. State, 235
Ga. 644 (3) (220 SE2d 922) (1975). See also Lockett v. Ohio,
438 U. S. 586, 604 (98 SC 2954, 57 LE2d 973) (1978), which held that
"the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments require that the sentencer, in
all but the rarest kind of capital case, not be precluded from
considering as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant's
character or record and any of the circumstances of the offense that
the defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death." (Emphasis
in original, footnotes omitted.) In Cofield v. State,
247 Ga. 98 (7) (274 SE2d 530) (1981),
we held that, whether or not Lockett v. Ohio, supra, required it, in
Georgia, a mother's testimony that she loved her son and did not
wish to see him executed was admissible in mitigation in a death
penalty case.
Ralph's testimony that he did not wish to see his
grandson die would have been admissible in mitigation and the trial
court's opinion to the contrary was wrong. Moreover, Ralph's
testimony would have been particularly significant because he was
closely related not only to the appellant but also to the victims;
unlike the mother in Cofield, Ralph was not viewing the case solely
from appellant's perspective, and his opinion might well have been
given considerable importance by the jury.
The state contends, nonetheless, that the denial
of continuance was not error because the appellant failed to show
that Ralph's attendance could have been secured within a reasonable
time. We agree that such a showing would be a normal prerequisite to
relief. We are not prepared to hold that Ralph's testimony, although
admissible, was so important that appellant was entitled to a
continuance of indefinite duration. As applied to this case,
however, the state's position presents several difficulties.
First, the basis of the court's denial of
continuance was the court's mistaken belief that Ralph's testimony
was inadmissible, rather than appellant's failure to demonstrate
that only a short continuance would have been necessary.
Second, appellant had no reason to anticipate
Ralph's absence until he failed to appear Saturday morning. Saturday
was the last day of the trial, and appellant was forced to rest his
case and to present his closing arguments prior to the luncheon
recess. In these circumstances, if further efforts to secure Ralph's
attendance were not mooted by the court's pronouncement that Ralph's
testimony would be inadmissible, the court's denial of appellant's
motion for a short continuance to ascertain the reason for Ralph's
absence and to attempt to secure his presence or at least to
determine how long he might be unavailable, denied appellant a
reasonable opportunity to secure the attendance of his witness that
morning or to establish to the court's satisfaction that the witness
could be obtained within a reasonable period of time.
Finally, the record, as supplemented after trial
by Ralph's testimony (see Rule IV (A) (5) (b) of the Unified Appeal
Procedure), strongly suggests that Ralph could have come to court
Saturday had he realized the importance of his testimony and the
importance of testifying that day or not at all: Ralph testified
that he was 72 years old and had a heart condition which rendered
him unable to work. He had a prescription for NTG tablets that he
took as needed for chest pain. He testified that he got "pained in
my heart" Friday night of the trial. The next day he wanted to
testify but was not able to. He admitted, however, that he did not
consult a physician any time during the trial week. Nor did he find
it necessary to take his medicine Friday night or Saturday. He said
that he felt like he ought to be in court, but he did not think the
case would go as bad as it did. And he figured he could testify
later if he had to.
The trial court's denial of a continuance,
premised as it was on the court's failure to recognize that Ralph's
testimony would have been admissible, coupled with the court's
refusal to allow appellant an adequate opportunity to ascertain how
long it would take to secure Ralph's attendance, was an abuse of
discretion. His death sentences must therefore be set aside.
Appellant's convictions are affirmed. The
sentences of death are reversed and the case remanded for a new
trial on the sentences to be imposed for the murders.
Rafe Banks III, District Attorney, Michael J.
Bowers, Attorney General, Mary Beth Westmoreland, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
George J. Thomas II for appellant.
DECIDED JUNE 30, 1983 -- REHEARING DENIED JULY 21, 1983.