A grand jury indicted Billy Leon Alford for attempted rape. At trial, the prosecutor and Alford’s counsel agreed on a set of jury instructions which included finding instructions for attempted rape and assault and battery. 1 The jury convicted Alford of assault and battery.
On appeal, Alford argues the trial court erred by instructing the jury on assault and battery because it is not a lesser-included offense of attempted rape, the charged offense. We need not address this assertion, however, because Alford
invited error by agreeing to the jury instructions he now challenges.
See McBride v. Commonwealth,
Alford argues we should invoke the ends-of-justice exception to Rule 5A:18. For several reasons, we decline to do so. The approbate-reprobate doctrine is broader and more demanding than Rule 5A:18. The very fact that Alford “invited the error” (by agreeing the assault and battery jury instruction
Even in cases governed by Rule 5A:18—those involving mere waiver rather than invited error—we consider the ends-of-justice doctrine to be a “narrow” exception that should be “used sparingly.”
Id.
at 512,
With respect to jury instructions, we employ the ends-of-justice exception when the trial court convicts the defendant “for conduct that was not a criminal offense”—that is, when the absence of a proper jury instruction
and
proof of an essential element makes it a legal impossibility for defendant to have committed a crime.
Id.
at 514,
In sum, Alford cannot challenge on appeal his assault and battery conviction because he agreed the trial court should instruct the jury on this charge. We thus affirm his conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The agreement of counsel to the instructions apparently took place off the record. On the record, however, the trial court confirmed the agreement. See App. at 165. In his brief on appeal, Alford concedes "[d]efense counsel and the Attorney for the Commonwealth agreed to the Instructions read by the Court and neither party offered any additional instructions.” Appellant’s Br. at 1-2.
.
See also Porter v. Commonwealth,
. Though it is unnecessary to catalogue them all, we acknowledge exceptions exist even to the procedural bar imposed by the invited error doctrine—like, for example, when the error caused the trial court to go beyond its subject matter jurisdiction,
Bazemore
v.
Commonwealth,
