In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: November 23, 2021
S21A1098. MURRAY v. THE STATE.
NAHMIAS, Chief Justice.
After a jury trial, Appellant Andrew Murray was convicted of
malice murder and other crimes related to the shooting death of
Paul Sampleton, Jr. Over the course of his motion-for-new-trial
proceedings, Murray was appointed three different attorneys, each
of whom he rejected. Representing himself at the last hearing on his
motion for new trial, Murray purported to be a different person –
“Billy Drew Bey” – who was acting as Murray’s attorney, prompting
the trial court to enter an order either dismissing or denying
Murray’s amended motion for new trial because “Bey” had not
provided any support for the motion and “Murray” had failed to
appear for the hearing.
Murray now appeals that order. As explained below, because
the reasons given by the trial court are not proper grounds for
dismissing or denying Murray’s amended motion for new trial, we
vacate the trial court’s order and remand the case for the court to
consider the merits of Murray’s motion.
1. In June 2014, a Gwinnett County grand jury indicted
Murray, Tavaughn Saylor, and Larnell Sillah for malice murder,
two counts of felony murder, armed robbery, two counts of burglary,
and nine other crimes in connection with the December 2012
shooting of Sampleton. Murray and Saylor were also charged with
possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and felony murder based
on that offense. Murray, Saylor, and Sillah were tried together from
September 15 to October 7, 2014. At trial, Murray initially
represented himself, but his stand-by counsel took over the
representation after the first week. The jury found Murray guilty of
all charges except one burglary count. He was sentenced to serve life
in prison without the possibility of parole, plus a consecutive life
sentence and 120 years in prison. He remained in custody.
On October 10, 2014, three days after the trial ended, Murray’s
trial counsel filed a boilerplate motion for new trial, asserting
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summarily that the verdict was not supported by the evidence and
was “contrary to the law and the principles of justice and equity” and
that the trial court committed “errors of law.” That motion was
amended on September 30, 2016, by Michael Marr, Murray’s first
post-conviction counsel. The amended motion raised 12
enumerations of error, including claims that the trial court erred by
merging rather than vacating the felony murder counts, by allowing
Murray’s stand-by counsel to conduct voir dire, by allowing the
prosecutor to treat Murray’s mother and another witness as hostile
witnesses, and by admitting three pieces of gang-related evidence
and evidence of Murray’s brother’s murder conviction. The amended
motion also claimed that Murray’s trial counsel provided ineffective
assistance by failing to file a demurrer to certain counts of the
indictment, to move to exclude the testimony of Murray’s mother,
and to move for a mistrial or to sever when evidence was presented
that Sillah intimidated a witness.1
1 The amended motion appeared to entirely supplant trial counsel’s
initial, boilerplate motion for new trial. The amended motion also “adopts and
3
On February 7, 2017, the trial court held what was supposed
to be an evidentiary hearing on Murray’s motion for new trial, at
which Murray expressed dissatisfaction with Marr’s representation.
Ultimately, however, Murray said that he wanted Marr to remain
as his counsel, and the hearing was continued so that Murray could
talk with Marr about the issues that Murray wanted to raise. In
June, Murray filed a motion to remove Marr as counsel. In August,
the trial court issued an order clarifying that Murray was still
represented by Marr. In January 2018, Murray filed pro se another
motion to remove Marr, as well as two amended motions for new
trial. On February 1, Marr filed a motion to withdraw as Murray’s
counsel, which the court granted on February 7. Also on February 7,
the court appointed Frances Kuo to serve as Murray’s attorney. On
February 13, Murray filed pro se another amended motion for new
trial. On March 19, Murray filed a motion requesting to represent
himself, and the trial court allowed Kuo to withdraw on April 12.
incorporates” the enumerations of error raised by Murray’s co-defendants, but
their motions for new trial are not in the record on appeal.
4
During the second attempt at a motion-for-new-trial
evidentiary hearing on October 16, 2018, Murray appeared pro se,
but he told the trial court that he was “under duress” and wanted an
attorney to be appointed for him. The hearing was continued again
so that Murray could have counsel, and the next day the court
appointed G. Richard Stepp to represent Murray. Between October
2018 and February 2019, Murray made 32 pro se filings, including
seven filings complaining about Stepp or asserting that Murray was
being represented by himself or by “Billy Drew Bey.” On May 1,
2019, Stepp moved to withdraw, noting that Murray had filed a bar
grievance against him; the trial court granted that motion on May
15, after a hearing at which the court discussed the consequences of
Murray representing himself and Murray waived his right to
counsel. On May 30, the trial court entered an order finding that
Murray had “made a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of
the right to counsel” and allowing him to represent himself.
Proceeding pro se, Murray filed two motions to amend his
motion for new trial on June 27, 2019, raising 25 new enumerations
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of error, including claims that the trial court erred by failing to
inform him of the accusation against him, that his trial counsel
provided ineffective assistance by failing to object to hearsay
testimony of two witnesses and failing to raise a Confrontation
Clause objection to Sillah’s interview, and that there was
exculpatory evidence that the prosecutor withheld and that his trial
counsel should have discovered. Murray also raised a number of
complaints about the way he was arrested and indicted and the way
he was treated following his convictions. 2
On December 9, 2019, the trial court convened the third
attempt at a motion-for-new-trial evidentiary hearing. When
Murray first addressed the court, he asserted that he was “Billy
Drew Bey,” the “attorney in fact for Defendant Andrew Richard
2 These two motions are both titled “Motion to Amend Motion for New
Trial and New Legal Claim,” and in them Murray requested that the trial court
“allow new legal claim[s] to be heard at the motion for new trial.” Thus, the
motions appear to be adding to, rather than supplanting, the earlier motion-
for-new-trial filings. Because the three amended motions for new trial that
Murray filed pro se while he was represented by Marr and then Kuo were
nullities, these two new motions appear to be adding to the amended motion
for new trial filed by Marr. See Lopez v. State, 310 Ga. 529, 536 (852 SE2d 547)
(2020) (“[A] pro se filing by a represented party is a legal nullity without
effect.”).
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Murray.” When he admitted that he did not have a Georgia Bar
number, the court explained to him that Bey could not represent
Murray, but Murray could represent himself. As the hearing
continued, Murray appeared to acknowledge that he was Murray,
and he asserted that he needed a number of documents to help him
develop his arguments. The hearing was continued again, and the
court entered an order noting that Murray and Bey are the same
person and ordering the district attorney to provide Murray with
certain documents before the next hearing.
On February 3, 2020, Murray filed “Defendant[’]s Amended
Brief In Support Of His Motion For New Trial And Request For A
Mistrial,” adding seven new claims to be considered “not excluding
any briefs already filed with the Courts.” On February 20, the trial
court again attempted to hold an evidentiary hearing on Murray’s
motion for new trial, and Murray again asserted that he was “Billy
Drew Bey,” the “attorney in fact for the defendant.” Murray
acknowledged that Bey was not a member of the Georgia Bar, and
the court again explained that Bey therefore could not represent
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Murray. The following exchange then occurred:
THE DEFENDANT: I fully understand everything you
just said, but I am not a member, I cannot represent
Andrew Murray, so don’t have any business here, so –
THE COURT: Very good.
THE DEFENDANT: – you might as well tell them to take
these shackles off so I can go about my business.
THE COURT: When you see Mr. Murray, if you’ll let him
know that we are going to dismiss his appeal. You can
head back with the deputies.
THE DEFENDANT: I’d like to object.
THE COURT: You may object, sir. You can do that in
writing as soon as you get the order. Will you do an order
for me?
MR. D’ENTREMONT [the prosecutor]: I’ll do an order,
Judge.
THE COURT: Thank you.
MR. D’ENTREMONT: And I do want to make sure I
understand the basis for the order, is that based on the
fact that Mr. Murray has been a fugitive while the motion
has been pending.
THE COURT: He’s not here. There’s another individual
that has identified himself for the Court.
MR. D’ENTREMONT: That’s my understanding, Judge.
THE COURT: Yes, sir, thank you.
Almost a year later, on February 17, 2021, the trial court
entered an order entitled “DISMISSAL OF APPEAL.” The order
explained that Murray identified himself as Bey at the February 20,
2020 hearing. The order then continued:
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As such, Mr. Bey offered no support for Mr. Murray’s
amended motion for new trial.
WHEREFORE, having failed to appear for his own
motion for new trial hearing, Defendant Andrew Richard
Murray’s amended motion for new trial is hereby
DENIED.
A week later, the court amended the order. This “Amended
DISMISSAL OF APPEAL” corrected the first line of the order, which
initially incorrectly said that Murray pled guilty, rather than being
found guilty by a jury. The remainder of the order was not changed.
Still representing himself, Murray filed a timely appeal.
2. The trial court’s order is confusing. Although the court
asserted at the last hearing that it was going to “dismiss [Murray’s]
appeal” and the final order is titled “Amended DISMISSAL OF
APPEAL,” Murray did not have an appeal pending at the time of the
order, only an amended motion for new trial. And as to that motion,
the body of the order says that it “is hereby DENIED,” not dismissed.
The court gave two reasons for its ruling: Murray “offered no support
for [his] amended motion for new trial” at the hearing, and Murray
“failed to appear for his own motion for new trial hearing.” We will
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discuss those reasons in turn.
(a) To the extent the first reason indicates that the trial court
considered the merits of the numerous claims raised by Murray’s
amended motion for new trial and denied them all because he did
not provide additional evidence beyond the trial record, the court
erred. See State v. Cash, 298 Ga. 90, 94 (779 SE2d 603) (2015)
(explaining that although some grounds for a motion for new trial
“do or may require new evidence,” other grounds “do not require new
evidence”). Some of Murray’s claims required additional evidence to
be successful because they relied on alleged evidence that exists
outside the trial record, such as his claims that the State withheld
or his counsel failed to find certain exculpatory evidence.
However, some of Murray’s enumerations did not require
additional evidence, such as his merger claim, his claims that the
trial court erred by admitting certain evidence, and some of his
claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. See, e.g., Bundel v.
State, 308 Ga. 317, 320 (840 SE2d 349) (2020) (holding that the
appellant’s claim on motion for new trial that was “limited to the
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evidence introduced at trial” did not require a hearing); Wilson v.
State, 277 Ga. 195, 198 (586 SE2d 669) (2003) (explaining that
“where the ineffectiveness relates to alleged errors made during the
course of the trial as shown by the transcript, then trial counsel’s
testimony may not be required; the record speaks for itself” (citation
and punctuation omitted)). The trial court could have denied or
granted these claims based entirely on the existing record. Thus,
denying them on their merits on the ground that Murray failed to
present additional support for them at the hearing would be error
and undermines any effort to read the order as a ruling on the merits
of Murray’s claims. Indeed, neither Murray nor the State contends
that the trial court ruled on the merits of his amended motion, and
the Attorney General’s brief states that “[t]here is nothing in the
record to suggest that the trial court considered the merits of the
motion for new trial as amended.”
(b) To the extent the trial court dismissed Murray’s amended
motion for new trial without considering its merits because Murray
purportedly failed to appear at the hearing, that too was error.
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Motions for new trial can be, and regularly are, decided without a
hearing. See, e.g., Robinson v. State, 309 Ga. 729, 729 n.1 (848 SE2d
441) (2020) (noting that the trial court ruled on the motion for new
trial without a hearing); Shubert v. State, 306 Ga. 490, 491 n.1 (831
SE2d 826) (2019) (same).
If a defendant does not request a hearing or does not appear at
a scheduled hearing, he may waive his right to a hearing and the
opportunity to expand the record, but that does not waive his right
to have the merits of his motion for new trial considered and decided
by the trial court based on the existing record. See, e.g., Bundel, 308
Ga. at 319 (explaining that a “trial court has no duty to hold [ ] a
hearing [on a motion for new trial] on its own initiative”); Jones v.
State, 276 Ga. 171, 173 (575 SE2d 456) (2003) (holding that the trial
court did not err by ruling that the appellant’s lawyer waived the
right to a hearing on the motion for new trial by failing to appear);
Wilson, 277 Ga. at 198 (explaining that when no hearing on a motion
for new trial is requested, “only the right to a hearing is waived”).
Thus, Murray’s absurd assertion that he was not at the hearing was
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not a valid basis for the trial court to dismiss his amended motion
for new trial.
(c) In arguing that we should affirm the trial court’s order, the
Attorney General’s brief cites Mimms v. State, 254 Ga. App. 483 (562
SE2d 754) (2002), which held that after Mimms’s attorneys failed to
appear at his motion-for-new-trial hearing, “the trial court did not
err in dismissing Mimms’ motion.” Id. at 486. However, two earlier
statements in that opinion indicate that Mimms’s motion for new
trial was actually denied on the merits rather than dismissed on
that ground. See id. at 484 (“The trial court denied Mimms’ motion
for new trial.”); id. (“Mimms argues that it was error for the trial
court to deny her motion without a hearing . . . .”). Likewise, in this
Court’s certiorari opinion affirming the holding in Mimms on the
issue of attorney leaves of absence, we said that “the trial court
denied [Mimms’s] motion [for new trial] without a hearing.” Jones,
276 Ga. at 171-172.3 And, as indicated in the previous subdivision,
3Jones was the lead case name in an opinion that also included review
of Mimms and a third Court of Appeals case.
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we then held that the trial court did not err by holding that Mimms’s
lawyers waived her right to a hearing on the motion for new trial by
failing to appear. See id. at 173.
Moreover, after Mimms stated its conclusion that the trial
court did not err by dismissing Mimms’s motion based on her
lawyers’ failure to appear at the hearing, the opinion cited three
prior Court of Appeals decisions. See Mimms, 254 Ga. App. at 486.
But only one of those cases – Scott v. State, 121 Ga. App. 458 (174
SE2d 243) (1970) – held that the dismissal of a motion for new trial
was proper when the defendant’s counsel did not show up for the
hearing. See id. at 460-461. And Scott did not cite any authority in
support of this holding, which is contrary to the decisions of this
Court discussed in the previous subdivision. 4 Accordingly, Scott’s
holding on this point is hereby disapproved, as is Mimms’s holding
to the extent it indicates that dismissal of a motion for new trial
4 The Scott court also concluded in the alternative that even if the
dismissal of the motion for new trial was error, there was no harm, because
elsewhere in the court’s opinion, every ground that was raised in the motion
had been considered and rejected. See 121 Ga. App. at 461.
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based on a failure to appear at a hearing on the motion may be
proper.
3. Murray’s flagrant disrespect for the trial court and judicial
process – as demonstrated by many of his actions, including his
repeated refusal to accept the lawyers appointed for him (even after
he specifically requested them), his filing of dozens of pro se motions
while represented, his creation of an imaginary character to serve
as his lawyer, and his refusal to identify himself correctly to the trial
court – was undoubtedly frustrating for the court, which was
striving to ensure that he received the benefit of properly conducted
motion-for-new-trial proceedings. Murray’s behavior was
inappropriate and served only to waste the trial court’s time and
delay resolution of his case. Nevertheless, in light of the analysis
above, we must vacate the trial court’s order and remand the case
for the court to consider the merits of Murray’s amended motion for
new trial.
Judgment vacated, and case remanded. All the Justices concur.
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