MIKELL, Presiding Judge.
A jury convicted Darius Michael Culver of two counts of first degree forgery and two counts of theft by deception. He appeals the denial of his motion for a new trial, enumerating three errors: (1) the trial court's grant of the state's reverse Batson
"On appeal from a criminal conviction, a defendant no longer enjoys the presumption of innocence, and the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the guilty verdict."
So viewed, the evidence shows that Culver entered into a contract with C.E. Hall Construction, Inc. ("Hall"), a general contractor, to serve as a subcontractor providing materials and labor for masonry work at Hall's construction project at a Savannah-area church. Hall issued two checks totaling more than $12,900 for materials and made payable, jointly, to Culver and to his materials supplier, Clarkes Block Company Culver endorsed the checks, as did his wife, who used two different names to sign them. No one from Clarkes Block endorsed the checks. When Culver cashed the checks at a liquor store, he created the impression that Clarkes Block had given him permission to cash the checks. The store owner testified that when he asked about the second signature on one of the checks, which was in fact Culver's wife's signature, Culver told him the check was signed by a secretary at Clarkes Block. The total amount of the checks was intended to pay Clarkes Block, as Culver had been paid for his labor by separate check.
1. Culver claims the trial court erred in granting the state's reverse Batson challenge,
After three jurors were excused for cause, of the thirty-seven jurors who remained, twelve were black, two were Hispanic, and twenty-three were white. The record does not reveal the racial composition of the petit jury. In evaluating claims that the defendant used peremptory challenges in a racially discriminatory manner,
Although Culver argues that the state failed to make a prima facie showing of discrimination, once Culver offered a race-neutral explanation for the strike and the trial court ruled on the ultimate question of intentional discrimination, the preliminary issue of whether the state made a prima facie showing becomes moot.
Based on these guidelines, the trial court found that defense counsel's explanations for all the strikes were race-neutral. After defense counsel has offered race-neutral reasons for his strikes, the burden of proving that the proffered explanations are pretexts for discrimination then shifts back to the opponent of the strikes, in the case, this state.
Culver's enumeration focuses only on the trial court's analysis related to juror no. 21. While Culver argues that the trial court improperly placed the burden of disproving pretext on the defense, the record does not support this. Defense counsel stated that he could not recall why he excluded juror no. 21 but thought it was because this juror worked in a science- and detail-oriented job, and he did not want such people on the jury in a criminal case. The state countered that the juror "stated he worked in pest control . . . and he also was a musician by trade . . . he's not a technician." The trial court then found that juror no. 21 was excluded for a pretextual reason, and reseated that juror.
A decision on this and the other Batson factors rests upon the trial court's assessment of defense counsel's credibility and state of mind. "[I]t therefore lies peculiarly within the trial judge's province. The trial court's factual findings must be given great deference and may be disregarded only if clearly erroneous."
2. Culver contends that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on impeachment by prior inconsistent statements, or on the use of prior inconsistent statements as substantive evidence. We disagree.
Culver submitted a written request to charge Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, Vol. II: Criminal Cases (4th ed.), § 1.31.40, a broad-based charge on impeachment via several different means, including prior inconsistent statements, which exhorts the court to "charge only those that apply."
Despite the lack of objection below, the omission of these jury instructions was raised in Culver's amended motion for new trial and enumerated as error on appeal. In accordance with our Supreme Court's recent decision in State v. Kelly,
"Satisfying all four prongs of this standard is difficult, as it should be."
The pattern jury instruction on impeachment exhorts the court to "charge only those [portions of the instruction] that apply."
In his appellate brief, Culver identifies the witness his counsel allegedly attempted to impeach via prior inconsistent statements as Trevor Wells, one of the owners of Clarkes Block. Culver testified that Wells gave him permission to cash one of the two-party checks, keep the money, and repay Clarkes Block the whole amount later. He testified that when he got the second two-party check, he cashed it and kept the money without talking with Wells because of their prior conversation. Wells testified as follows:
While Wells's testimony certainly differed from Culver's, at no point did Culver's counsel ever present Wells with the substance of any alleged prior statement about giving Culver permission to cash the checks and keep the money, such that in his testimony on the stand, Wells was put in a position to deny or fail to admit any alleged prior statement.
3. Culver alleges that his trial counsel was ineffective. The standard for determining whether a defendant was denied effective assistance of counsel is a two-part test which requires a showing that counsel's performance was deficient
(a) Culver first asserts ineffectiveness in that his trial counsel "failed to make clear that his peremptory strike of Juror No. 21 was in no way due to racial bias."
Neither the trial record nor the transcript of the motion for a new trial, at which trial counsel testified as to Culver's ineffectiveness claims, supports this argument; nor does Culver's own appellate brief. First, as discussed in Division 1, above, the trial court found that Culver gave a race-neutral reason for striking juror no. 21, then found that the basis of the strike was pretextual. Also, at the start of the Batson hearing, counsel said, "Well, judge, I didn't count the white[s] and blacks. I went juror by juror to look at what I noted about them . . . and what their answers were in voir dire." Second, at the motion for a new trial, trial counsel testified that he did not strike juror no. 21 for any race- or gender-based reason. Finally, Culver's own appellate brief first quotes the trial court's statement at the Batson hearing: "the burden falls to you to give me a race neutral reason for exercising this strike" as to juror no. 21; then Culver's brief asserts that "trial counsel had done so."
Unless clearly erroneous, we will uphold a trial court's factual determinations with respect to claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, though we conduct a de novo review of the trial court's legal conclusions.
Judgment affirmed.
DILLARD and BOGGS, JJ., concur.