OPINION
A.C. appeals his adjudication as a delinquent child for committing an act that would be considered class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement if he were an adult. He argues that there is insufficient
The facts most favorable to the adjudication show that on September 21, 2009, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Officer Richard Stratman was dispatched to the lobby of the IMPD North District Headquarters regarding the recovery of a runaway juvenile. When Officer Stratman arrived in the lobby, A.C. was present with his mother. Officer Stratman asked A.C. some questions, but A.C. was unresponsive. Officer Stratman told A.C. to stand up, but "he refused to stand up. By just maintaining silence, not saying anything, not looking at [Officer Stratman]. So, [Officer Stratman] grabbed him by his ... right arm, lifted him up and placed him into handcuffs." Tr. at 3. Officer Stratman noticed that A.C.'s pants were "sagging down below his waist, almost to his knees." Id. Officer Stratman then uncuffed A.C. and asked him to pull his pants up. A.C. stood silent. Officer Stratman took a belt loop on the right side of A.C.'s pants and made an attempt to lift his pants up. A.C. "began to pull away a little bit and then with his left hand, suddenly pulled his left part of his pants back down[.]" Id. As Officer Stratman described it,
[A.C.] shifted his body weight away from me and more towards the chairs and his mother. _.... [A.C.] started to pull his weight and his body, kind of suddenly over to his left side, away from me and I grabbed [A.C.] by his arm and he kind of continued to lean his weight and at which time I then put [A.C.] in the handcuffs and secured him. And I then walked [A.C.] over to his mother and she pulled his pants up for him.
Id. at 4. As Officer Stratman led A.C. to see the medics for treatment of an arm injury, A.C. said, "Get off of me," and "just kind of leaned his weight and kinda pullled] away from [Officer Stratman's] grasp." Id. at 5. "At no time did [A.C.] push, hit, kick, or slap the Officer. Further, [A.C.] never displayed any intent to do any violence toward the officer." Appellant's Br. at 5 (citing Tr. at 7).
On September 22, 2009, the State submitted a delinquency petition to the juvenile court, alleging that A.C. committed what would be class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement if committed by an adult. The juvenile court approved the delinquency petition and ordered its filing the same day. On October 19, 2009, the juvenile court held a denial hearing. A.C. moved to have the matter involuntarily dismissed. See Ind. Trial Rule 41(B) (providing that, after party with burden of proof has completed presentation of evidence, opposing party may move for dismissal on ground that upon the weight of the evidence and the law there has been shown no right to relief). The trial court denied the motion and entered a true finding against A.C. for class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement if committed by an adult. On October 21, 2009, A.C. filed a motion to reconsider, upon which the juvenile court did not rule.
On November 12, 2009, the juvenile court held the disposition hearing. The juvenile court committed A.C. to the Department of Correction, but suspended the commitment and placed A.C. on probation with special conditions.
A.C. argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his delinquency ad-judieation for committing what would be considered class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement if he were an adult. When the State seeks to have a juvenile adjudicated as a delinquent child for com
To obtain an adjudication for resisting law enforcement, the State was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that A.C. did knowingly or intentionally "[floreibly resist, obstruct, or interfere with a law enforcement officer ... while the officer [was] engaged in the execution of his duties as an officer." Ind.Code § 35-44-3-3; Appellant's App. at 14. A.C. asserts that the evidence is insufficient to establish the element of forcible resistance.
For the last seventeen years, Indiana courts have cited Spangler v. State, 607 NE.2d 720 (Ind.19983) for the following definition of forcible resistance: "One 'forcibly resists' law enforcement when strong, powerful, violent means are used to evade a law enforcement official's rightful exercise of his or her duties." Id. at 723 {emphasis added). Recently in Lopes v. State,
We observe that "forcibly" modifies "resists, obstructs, and interferes," which at first blush would seem to require that a person use some force beyond that which would be required if "forcibly" did not modify "resists, obstructs, and interferes." Indeed, our supreme court has stated,
A correct interpretation of [Indiana Code Section 35-44-3-3] requires us to give meaning to the word "forcibly," because the legislature included the word in the statute. In order to sustain the conviction, the State must have proven not only that [the defendant] resisted, but that he forcibly resisted, because the modifying word "forcibly" is within that section of the statute. "Forcibly" is a required element of the erimel[.]
[Spangler,607 N.E.2d at 723 .] According to the Spangler court, the "appropriate meaning" of "forcibly" as used in Indiana Code Section 35-44-3-3 is as follows: "One 'forcibly resists law enforcement when strong, powerful, violent means are used to evade a law enforcement official's rightful exercise of his or her duties." Id. (emphasis added).
Nevertheless, Indiana jurisprudence indicates that the amount of force required to convict a person of resisting law enforcement is not as great as one would expect under the language in Spangler. In Johnson v. State,833 N.E.2d 516 (Ind.Ct.App.2005), another panel of this Court stated that it "may have moderated the definition of 'forcibly resist" as it was written in Spangler [,]" and noted that "until we are instructed otherwise by our Supreme Court, we see no reason to apply what appears to be an overly strict definition of forcibly resist[.]" Id. at 519; see also J.S. v. State,843 N.E.2d 1013 , 1017 (Ind.Ct.App.2006) (noting that Indiana courts had not applied an overly strict definition of "forcibly resist"), trans. demied.
Last year, our supreme court revisited the meaning of "forcibly" as used in Indiana Code Section 35-44-3-3. In Graham v. State, 908 N.E.2d 963 (Ind. 2009), the supreme court made the following observations:
This Court's opinion in Spangler [] examined the elements of the crime of resisting. Justice DeBruler noted that the word "forcibly" modifies "resists, obstructs, or interferes" and that force is an element of the offense. He explained that one "forcibly resists" when "strong, powerful, violent means are used to evade a law enforcement official's rightful exercise of his or her duties." [607 N.E.2d at 7283 ]. Spangler had refused to accept service of process from an officer, walking away from the officer in the face of demands that he accept a protective order. This Court held that such action was resistance to authority but not "forcible" resistance. "It is error as a matter of law to conclude," we said, "that 'forcibly resists includes all actions that are not passive." Id. at 724. Spangler's conviction was reversed.
The force involved need not rise to the level of mayhem. In Johnson [], a defendant in custody "pushed away with his shoulders while cursing and yelling" when the officer attempted to search him. As officers attempted to put him into a police vehicle, Johnson "stiffened up" and the police had to get physical in order to put him inside. [833 N.EB.2d at 517]. The Court of Appeals correctly held that Johnson's actions constituted forcible resistance.
Id. at 965-66.
Thus, in Grakam, the supreme court approved of the language used in Span-gler to define "forcibly resist," while simultaneously approving of the holding in Johnson. Although the Graham court acknowledged that the resistance described in Johnson was "modest," id. at 966, the Grakam court apparently overlooked the Johnson court's explicit ac-knowledgement that it was modifying the language of Spangler. Accordingly, we are somewhat hesitant to rely on Spangler's strong language because it does not appear to adequately describe the meaning of "forcibly resist" as it has been applied. However, based on the fact-sensitive nature of these cases, a simple comparison of the facts of this case with those of previous cases will lead us to a just result.
Id. at 1092-98.
It bears repeating that the defendant's resistance in Johnson, though subsequently described as "modest" by our supreme court in Graham, was held to be forcible resistance. (Graham,
Relying on Graham, we recently reversed a resisting law enforcement convietion based on insufficient evidence. In Colvin v. State,
Here, there is even less evidence of forcible resistance than in either Graham or Colvin. See also Berberena v. State,
Reversed.
Notes
. Probation was to end March 12, 2009.
. Colvin shows that even though police officers may have to use force to effectuate an arrest, the officers' use of force, in itself, does not establish that the defendant forcibly resisted.
. The State asserts that "there is case authority that would hold that A.C.'s failure to stand when ordered by the officer constituted forcible resistance because his actions required the officer to lift him to his feet." Appellee's Br. at 5. In support, the State cites McCaffrey v. State,
