Lead Opinion
ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
The defendant, Michael S. Dill, was convicted of burglary
In this appeal, the defendant argues, in part, that flight instructions are inherently improper. The State urges that the instruction correctly states the law, noting several recent cases in which this Court has failed to find error in the giving of a flight instruction.
In Bellmore v. State,
In the present case, the trial judge acknowledged the Bellmore directive but, noting the subsequent Bufkin opinion that permitted a flight instruction, he proceeded to give the flight instruction used in Bellmore. The defendant timely objected on several grounds, including that we had recommended against its use, that the instruction focused excessive attention on evidence of flight, and that it was confusing. Record at 568-69. Implementing our directive in Bellmore, we now hold that the trial court erred in giving the flight instruction. The instruction is confusing, it unnecessarily emphasizes certain evidence, and it has great potential to mislead the jury-
This instruction is inherently contradictory because it simultaneously informs the jury that a person’s flight after the commission of a crime is “not proof of guilt” but yet is “evidence of consciousness of guilt” and “may be considered.” The purpose of a jury instruction “is to inform the jury of the law applicable to the facts without misleading the jury and to enable it to comprehend the case clearly and arrive at a just, fair, and correct verdict.” Chandler v. State,
Flight and related conduct may be considered by a jury in determining a defendant’s guilt. Johnson v. State,
We further find error in the giving of the flight instruction because of its significant potential to mislead. In Fisher v. State,
[I]t is a matter of common knowledge that men who are entirely innocent do sometimes fly from the scene of a crime through fear of being apprehended as the guilty parties, or from an unwillingness to appear as witnesses. Nor is it true as an accepted axiom of criminal law that “the wicked flee when no man pursueth; but the righteous are bold as a lion.” Innocent men sometimes hesitate to confront a jury, — not necessarily because they fear that the jury will not protect them, but because they do not wish their names to appear in connection with criminal acts, are humiliated at being obliged to incur the popular odium of an arrest and trial, or because they do not wish to be put to the annoyance or expense of defending themselves.
Alberty v. United States,
Because this flight instruction is confusing, unduly emphasizes specific evidence, and is misleading, we hold, in accordance with our directive in Bellmore, that it was error to give the instruction.
Errors in the giving or refusing of instructions are harmless where a conviction is clearly sustained by the evidence and the jury could not properly have found otherwise. Crawford v. State,
The defendant did not testify, and the following evidence is without substantial dispute. Sometime between the close of business on Wednesday, October 15, 1997, and 7:45 on Thursday, October 16, 1997, the office of Personnel Management (“PM”) in Bloomington was burglarized. A blank company check was discovered to have been taken from the office. At the time of the burglary, one of PM’s employees, Birchfield, was engaged to marry the defendant. On Wednesday evening, the defendant had requested keys from Birch-field’s key chain, and they argued about it. The defendant had access to Birehfield’s keys. The defendant did not return to their home that night. At approximately 3:00 a.m. Thursday morning, however, the defendant went to the home of a neighbor, Ambrose Craig. The defendant appeared upset and requested a loan of $500, claiming that he needed to deliver the money to unnamed persons at a local convenience store within twenty minutes “or they’re going to kill me.” Record at 501. Craig gave him a check for $500. Three or four minutes after the defendant left, Craig went to the convenience store but did not find the defendant and observed no vehicles present.
Birchfield arrived at work Thursday morning to discover that her keys to the office and her home were missing from her key ring. Shortly thereafter, her supervisor arrived and opened the door with his key. The supervisor testified that the lock was not fully engaged when he unlocked it.
From this evidence, we conclude that a reasonable jury could not properly have acquitted the defendant and would have rendered a guilty verdict even if the erroneous flight instruction had not been given. The instruction error does not require reversal.
We affirm the defendant’s convictions and as to all other issues, the Court of Appeals is summarily affirmed. Ind. Appellate Rule 11(B)(3).
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-43-2-1.
. Ind.Code § 35-43-4-3.
. Although not addressing the issue of confusion, prior cases have rejected claims that a flight instruction invaded the province of the jury "when it tells the jurors that flight of the accused is a circumstance which may be considered, and from which they may draw an inference of guilt in connection with the other evidence presented.” Phillips v. State,
. We overrule Agnew v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
This Court observes repeatedly that a trial judge should give instructions relevant to the issues raised by the parties, and our state’s trial practice features scores of instructions about particular aspects of various causes of action, given regularly by trial judges and regularly approved on appeal.
Against this relatively liberal backdrop, I find little justification for putting flight instructions on the extremely short list of those which are completely prohibited.
A reasonably comprehensive survey reveals that hardly any other state supreme courts share my colleagues’ anxiety about such instructions. See, e.g., Ex parte Clark,
The Montana Supreme Court does share the view taken today by our Court. State v. Davis, 5 P.3d 547, 553 (Mont.2000) (flight instruction “may be an unnecessary comment on the evidence” and “should no longer be given”).
Moreover, while the U.S. Supreme Court found error in certain flight instructions late in the nineteenth century,
The Seventh Circuit shares the majority’s concern that an instruction may unduly emphasize flight, and it has discouraged the use of such instructions, as we did in Bellmore. United States v. Williams,
I think the republic will still stand even without the flight instructions sometimes tendered by the State, but I would not be surprised to see defense counsel now begin to tender their own instructions on flight as a way to safeguard their clients against the possibility that the prosecutor might oversell the matter during final argument. Sorting out the equities of that should prove challenging.
All in all, I would prefer to leave us wher/we were in Bellmore.
. Alberty v. United States,
. Referring to a typical formulation requiring evidence that "1) the defendant's conduct constituted flight; 2) the defendant’s flight was the result of consciousness of guilt; 3)the defendant's guilt related to the crime with which he was charged; and, 4) the defendant felt guilty about the crime charged because he, in fact, committed the crime.” Id. at 678.
