Lead Opinion
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI
¶ 1. Following his capital-murder conviction in Jackson County, Terry Hye Jr. received a life sentence without the possibility of parole. The Court of Appeals affirmed Hye’s conviction but vacated and remanded his sentence as unconstitutional, pursuant to the intervening decision of the United States Supreme Court in Miller v. Alabama, — U.S. —,
¶ 2. We agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court properly denied Hye’s request for an accessory-after-fact instruction because there was no evidentiary basis for it. We also find, after much consideration on the matter, that a criminal defendant no longer has the unilateral right under Mississippi law to insist upon an instruction for lesser-related offenses which are not necessarily included in the charged offense(s), i.e., so-called lesser-nonincluded-offense instructions. And we overrule Griffin v. State,
FACTS
On October 23, 2008, Michael and Linda Porter stopped at a Conoco gas station in Moss Point, Mississippi, to ask
The shooter was later identified as Darwin Wells, who was fifteen years old at the time of the murder. Wells was convicted of deliberate-design murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. Wells’s conviction was affirmed by this Court in Wells v. State,
Kelly testified for the State at Hye’s trial. Kelly was initially charged with capital murder but ultimately pleaded guilty to accessory after the fact and served eleven months in jail. According to Kelly, earlier that day he, Hye, and Benjamin met Wells at a store, the Little Super. Benjamin and Wells stated they needed money, and Wells said he would “hit a lick.” Kelly stated this meant getting money by any means, legally or illegally. The group left the Little Super and walked to Kelly’s house. On the way, Wells got into a fight with another person on the street. The police responded, and all four men were searched. No weapons or drugs were found on the men. After this, Wells left the group for the afternoon.
The group met again a few hours later at the Little Super. Wells stated again that he needed to “hit a lick.” Hye indicated he needed to find someone to buy him cigarettes, so the group walked to the Conoco. On the way Wells showed his gun to Kelly. Kelly’s testimony indicates the whole group, including Hye, knew Wells was carrying a gun. Once the group neared the Cono-co, Kelly decided to leave and turned around at a stop sign one block away from the Conoco. Kelly was concerned that “every time we go down there or something, we always get locked up for something.” As he was turning away, Kelly said he heard a gunshot and saw Wells, Benjamin, and Hye ran past him. However, at one point, Kelly testified Hye and Benjamin were still standing in the road when Wells approached the Porters’ car.
Hye testified in his own defense and denied any involvement with Michael’s death. Hye stated he thought Wells wanted to sell drags when he said “hit a lick.” Hye said he found someone to buy him cigarettes at the Conoco, but he never set foot on the property. According to Hye, after the Porters drove up, Wells ran from the side of the store but slipped and fell. Only then did Hye notice Wells had a gun. Hye said he and Kelly were walking away when he heard a gunshot.
Benjamin and Wells were called to the stand but refused to testify, each invoking his right against self-incrimination. Zachary Kelly, Alonso [sic] Kelly’s cousin, was called to testify as to a conversa
Hye,
¶ 3. This Court granted Hye’s Petition for Writ of Certiorari by order entered on January 9, 2014. On June 12, 2014, this Court ordered supplemental briefing regarding “[w]hether Griffin v. State,
¶ 4. Having reviewed the supplemental briefing regarding the question outlined in the June 12, 2014, order from this Court, we find that Mississippi’s practice of instructing the jury on lesser nonincluded crimes is “fundamentally unsound.” We, therefore, overrule Griffin and its progeny. Additional facts, as necessary, will be related in our discussion.
DISCUSSION
¶ 5. As mentioned, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court properly denied Hye’s request for an accessory-after-the-fact instruction. The trial court may refuse a proffered jury instruction if the instruction is without a foundation in the evidence. Murphy v. State,
¶ 6. Hye’s requested instruction in this instance is known as a lesser-nonincluded-offense instruction — typically referred to as such because it instructs the jury on an offense whose essential elements are not included (or a subset) of the offense(s) charged in the indictment. This type instruction lies in contrast with what is known as a lesser-included-offense instruction — referred to as such because all of its essential elements are also essential elements of the greater offense charged.
¶ 7. Like most jurisdictions, Mississippi has long recognized that an offense alleged in the indictment (or accusatory pleading) may necessarily include one or more lesser offenses. Under Mississippi Code Section 99-19-5, the jury may convict the defendant of an “inferior offense, or other offense, the commission of which is necessar: ily included in the offense with which he is charged in the indictment ...,”
¶ 8. A lesser offense is necessarily included in the greater offense if the elements of the greater offense include all the elements of the lesser offense, such that the greater cannot be committed without also committing the lesser. See Porter v. State,
¶ 9. In 1988, this Court greatly expanded the law in this area in the case Griffin v. State, with its holding that a criminal defendant may request an instruction regarding any offense carrying a lesser punishment if the lesser offense arises out of a continuing factual scenario giving rise to the charge laid in the indictment. Griffin,
This case presents a problem we encounter all too often. The prosecution charges the accused with a serious felony, only to have the defense offer a version of the facts rendering the accused far less culpable and, most important, subject to a far lesser punishment. If the evidence be such that a reasonable jury might have found the facts as the defense suggests them to have been, the accused of right is entitled to have the jury consider that option and be instructed to that effect.
Id. at 445 (emphasis added). In applying this rationale to the case before it, Griffin reasoned:
Whether simple assault is formally a lesser included offense to rape is not the point. We have before us a continuing factual scenario bracketed by a relatively brief period of time .... The facts suggest that Griffin may have been guilty of at least two possible courses of criminal conduct: rape and simple assault, the latter carrying a maximum penalty far less than the former. As thejury may on these facts reasonably have found Griffin guilty of simple assault but not guilty of rape — -without any inconsistency in evidentiary or ultimate findings, it follows that Griffin was of right entitled to have the jury instructed on the lesser offense of simple assault.
Id. at 447-48.
¶ 10. From Griffin, Mississippi began its “journey into non-included offense instructions.” McDonald v. State,
¶ 11. At this point, we must reiterate that fundamental jurisprudential policy requires that prior applicable precedent usually must be followed even though the case, if considered anew, might be decided differently by the current court. This doctrine is known as stare decisis. The principle is based on the assumption that consistency and definiteness in the law are the major objectives of the legal system. Laurel Daily Leader, Inc. v. James, 224 Miss.654, 681,
¶ 12. We find this to be the case with the Griffin rule. Indeed, our Court of Appeals, which hears many criminal appeals each year, has recognized and communicated on numerous occasions the problematic nature this practice creates for our criminal jurisprudence. Also, the Uniform Criminal Rules Study Committee, which comprises some of the finest legal minds in this state in the area óf criminal law, has proposed the Griffin rule be abandoned. The vast majority of states do not allow the practice. And the United States Supreme Court prohibits the practice in the federal courts by virtue of Rule 31(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which limits a defendant to instructions on lesser offenses “necessarily included” in the offense charged.
¶ 13. As Judge Maxwell rightly pointed out in Gebben v. State,
¶ 14. In McDonald, Judge Southwick called attention to the flawed reasoning in Griffin.
In the original case that unleashed us on her journey into non-included offense instructions, the Court said “[wjhether simple assault is formally a lesser included offense to rape is not the point.” Griffin [], 533 So.2d at [] 447. With respect for the Court and the author of that opinion, that should be and had before then been exactly the point. If the elements on the lesser offense areall in the greater offense, then what is in the lesser offense instruction will necessarily have been examined fully in the trial.
The problems of this case, when the lesser non-included charge was based on factual issues that were not meaningfully developed, are one more set of reasons that this whole area of law has proved perhaps unexpectedly troublesome. The evidence here of an effort to arrest was incidental at best, though it did exist. A jury should not be asked to determine the guilt of a person on an offense for which he was not even tried.
McDonald,
¶ 15. We agree.
¶ 16. At the outset, we point out that Griffin instituted the rule without much discussion and cited no authority for its support. Though Griffin did not expressly say, we think it fair to surmise that the Court was proceeding on what it believed was a practical and logical extension of Mississippi’s existing law for lesser-nonin-cluded-offense instructions. As will be explained, though, the rule is neither a practical nor a logical extension of existing Mississippi law, but rather is subversion of it.
¶ 17. In Whitaker, the D.C. Circuit held that a defendant’s right, under Federal Rule 31(c), to request instructions on lesser necessarily included offenses shown by the evidence could not be confined by a strict comparison of the elements of the greater and lesser offenses. The Whitaker court reasoned, “[a] more natural, realistic, and sound interpretation ... is that the defendant is entitled to invoke Rule 31(c) when a lesser offense is established by the evidence adduced at trial in proof of the greater offense, with the caveat that there must also be an ‘inherent’ relationship between the greater and lesser offenses, i.e., they must relate to the protection of the same interests, and must be so related that in the general nature of these crimes, though not necessarily invariably, proof of the lesser offense is necessarily presented as part of the showing of the commission of the greater offense.” Whitaker,
¶ 18. In Geiger, California accepted the essence of Whitaker’s rationale for the concept of related offenses. Birks,
¶ 19. The same has resulted in Mississippi under the Griffin rule. By allowing a criminal defendant “to seek and obtain conviction for a lesser [nonincluded] offense whose elements the state has neither pled nor sought to prove” gives the defendant a “superior trial right.” See, e.g., Sheffield,
¶ 20. As recognized by the Uniform Criminal Rules Study Committee, prior to Griffin, there existed symmetry in Mississippi’s criminal jurisprudence. Again, under the lesser-included-offense doctrine, all the elements of the charged offense are treated as pleaded in the indictment and undertaken to be proven by the prosecution - at trial. Criminal defendants are deemed on notice of all the elements contained in the greater offense, and thus are likewise on notice of any other offense, the commission of which is necessarily included in the offense with which the defendant is charged in the indictment. See Miss.Code Ann. § 99-19-5(1) (Rev.2007). Both the prosecution and the defendant may seek an instruction on a lesser-included offense. Under the Griffin rule, however, only the criminal defendant may request a lesser-nonincluded-offense instruction, as constitutional notice considerations forbid the prosecution from receiving an instruction on a lesser offense whose elements are not included in the indictment. We find the inherent imbalance embodied by the Griffin rule is significant and unsustainable.
¶ 21. We first point out that, soon after Griffin was decided, “all arguable federal support for its conclusions has been withdrawn.” See Birks,
¶ 22. In Schmuck, the Court held that the right of a federal noncapital defendant to obtain instructions on a lesser-included offense under Federal Rule 31(c) is limited by a strict-elements test which compares only the statutory definitions of the two crimes. Schmuck,
¶23. In Hopkins, the Supreme Court expressed that the practice of allowing lesser-nonincluded-offense instructions is “not only unprecedented, but also unworkable[,]” and is likely to “detract from, rather than enhance[], the rationality of the process.” Hopkins,
¶ 24. Both Schmuck and Hopkins “identified serious legal and practical difficulties with any requirement that instructions on nonincluded offenses be given in criminal cases.” Birks,
Schmuck’s reasoning also impresses us for broader and more fundamental reasons. In particular, we are persuaded that the concern for mutual fairness between defense and prosecution, as set forth in Schmuck, is an important one which has independent foundation in California’s law governing instructions on lesser offenses. The Geiger rule contravenes the principle of mutual fairness by giving the defendant substantially greater rights either to require, or to prevent, the consideration of lesser non-included offenses than are accorded to the People, the party specifically responsible for determining the charges. Geiger’s soundness is therefore suspect.
Birks,
¶ 25. We likewise are persuaded by Schmuck’s reasoning and Birk’s concerns. In his dissent in Barber v. State,
A related criminal law doctrine is that even if the same facts would support the conviction of two different crimes with much different punishments, the grand jury can indict for the greater and there is no obligation that a lesser offense also be charged to the jury.
Even where there are two statutes covering the same crime, and there is a difference in the penalty between the two statutes, the [S]tate is under no obligation to prosecute under the statute with the lesser penalty. It may choose to prosecute under either, and so long as the choice is clear and unequivocal the defendant has no right to complain.
Cumbest v. State,456 So.2d 209 , 222-23 (Miss.1984), cited in Gibson v. State,731 So.2d 1087 (¶ 21) (Miss.1998). The only manner in which these two doctrines can work together without capriciousness, so long as the doctrine of “lesser [nonin-cluded] offense” is to be perpetuated, is if there are restrictions maintained as to when the lesser offense is to be charged.
¶26. Today, we find that the Griffin rule cannot be squared with the principle recognized and maintained by Cumbest. We also find there are no workable restrictions (or clear standards) that would prevent the Griffin rule from interfering with the role accorded to the State alone, the responsibility to determine the charges. See, e.g., Birks,
¶ 27. In our criminal jurisprudence, the party responsible for determining the charges to present to the grand jury is the State. When the grand jury returns an indictment on the presented charge, the State assumes the obligation to prove the charge and any necessarily included offense beyond a reasonable doubt. At the very least, any conviction of a charged or necessarily included offense is based on evidence adduced by the State in sustaining its hefty burden. The defense of course has no duty whatever to prove or disprove any crime by any standard. And the State undertakes no duty to prove uncharged, nonincluded offenses. Cumbest,
¶ 28. Case in point is illustrated by the trial record before us. As mentioned, Hye’s theory of the case at trial was that he did nothing wrong the evening of October 23, 2008, except: (1) illegally purchase cigarettes at the Conoco gas station, by soliciting an older gentleman who lived near the Conoco to make the purchase for him; and (2) not report the shooting to the police, because he was scared of Darwin Wells (not a criminal offense in this jurisdiction, because Mississippi does not recognize misprision of felonies). According to Hye’s testimony, the only reason he went to the Conoco gas station with Benjamin, Wells, and Alonzo Kelly was to get cigarettes. Hye testified that, after receiving his cigarettes and while standing across the street from the Conoco with Kelly and Benjamin, he heard Wells, who was on the Conoco property running towards the Porters’ vehicle, yell “I’m fixing to hit a lick.” Hye told the jury, “When [Porter] came out, [Wells] ran up to the car and slipped and got up and said: Give it up.” When Hye saw Wells’s gun for the first time, Hye and Kelly began walking away and had their backs turned away from the Conoco. When Hye heard the shot, Hye and Kelly ran. Hye said Benjamin ran behind Kelly, and Wells ran behind Benjamin. Kelly told Wells, “don’t run behind us.” Hye, Kelly, and Benjamin ran to Kelly’s house. From there, Hye and Benjamin went to the “Little Super” store and “caught a ride” to Hye’s house. The following night, a Friday, Hye, Kelly, and Benjamin went to the fair. There, they ran into Wells. None discussed what had transpired the night before. Hye told the jury that he did not know Michael had died until Sunday night, when the police contacted him. Hye also told the jury that he did not know what Wells meant by “hit a lick.” Hye further told the jury that the note he wrote to Benjamin while in jail awaiting trial (which jail officials had confiscated, turned over to the State, and which was submitted by the State to Hye’s jury at trial) was intended only to remind
¶ 29. The dissent posits that “Hye contended at trial that he had lied to police and covered for other members of the group, which according to his petition for writ of certiorari, ‘could have led the jury to believe that [Hye] was an accessory after the fact.’ ” This is incorrect. Nowhere in the record did Hye ever contend that he lied to the police to cover for other members of the group. Rather, Hye initially denied that he knew anything about the shooting at the Conoco. After admitting to authorities that he was present near the Conoco at the time of the shooting, Hye consistently maintained throughout that the only person who was involved in the shooting was Wells, and Hye consistently stated that the group separated from Wells after the shooting. The only discrepancy in Hye’s story was with his statement during cross-examination at trial that Benjamin was ' on the Conoco’s premises at one point, standing next to Wells. Hye maintained, though, that he did not see Benjamin do anything wrong.
¶ 30. The dissent also posits that Hye “cited Kelly’s testimony to show that Hye had colluded with Kelly, Benjamin, and Wells to concoct an exculpatory version of events.” Hye’s appellate counsel cites the following testimony from Kelly at trial for this contention:
Q. All right. Do you remember when you talked to the police?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. It was that Monday?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Okay. Over the weekend, I imagine you had been talking to all three people at the scene?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Y’all had been discussing what happened down at the scene?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you tell the police what you know — or knew back then?
A. Yes, sir.
¶ 31. From this, the dissent would have us find that, because Hye testified that he and Benjamin had caught a ride from Moss Point to Pascagoula, where they stayed at Hye’s aunt’s house, “there was evidence to support that [Hye] provided assistance to [Benjamin] by providing shelter to him at a relative’s following the shooting.” This is conjecture, not evidence.
¶32. As did Hye, Kelly maintained throughout his testimony that he had his back turned from the Conoco at the time of the shooting. Kelly said he did not see either Hye or Benjamin ever walk onto Conoco’s premises. The trial record is utterly barren as to what occurred between these individuals during the weekend following the shooting and before their arrests on Monday. And there is no sufficient evidence whatsoever to support the theory that Hye concealed, received, aided, or assisted a felon, knowing that such person had committed a felon with intent to enable the felon to escape, avoid arrest, trial conviction or punishment after the commission of the felony.
¶ 33. Kelly, who the dissent points out testified “it wasn’t no plan[;][n]obody was planning to go rob nobody[,]” also testified as follows in response to the State’s question: “And is that when you said: Who’s got the gun?”:
I like, I said: How can we do, hit a lick, you know what I’m saying? Like, what you going to do? You going to sell some crack or something, because, you know what I’m saying? So, so, [Wells] was like no, I got — He showed me the gun. So, everybody was like, you mean he got gun for real? So, you know, everybodywent to walking. So, I was like, no, no, I ain’t going to it. You get locked up every time you go to the store. So, then I stopped.
Later on, in cross-examination, the following exchange occurred between Kelly and Hye’s defense counsel:
Q. Earlier, when Mr. Lawrence was questioning you, did you not testify that you heard someone say they were going to commit a robbery?
A. Yes, sir, going to hit a lick.
Q. All right. And what does “hit a lick” mean?
A. Referring to getting money. Any part of getting money. Whatever you feel like it will take for you to get money, that what it mean.
Q. Okay. So, for example, if I go to work, am I hitting a lick?
A. If you getting money.
Q. If I get paid at the end of the week, did I hit a lick?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. All right. And if I go down there and somebody pulls up in the Conoco and I have some crack cocaine in my pocket and I go up and do what /all call service him and I sell some crack to that person, did I just hit a lick if they pay me back?
A. Yes, sir. If you’re getting paid for it, you hit a lick.
Q. Okay. If I’m getting money for it, it’s hitting a lick?
A. You can go out there and cut 10 yards, you hitting a lick. •
Q. And that means hit a lick? Right?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Okay. So, that’s what you heard that day. Am I right?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you hear anything about a robbery?
A. No, I didn’t hear about no robbery, but I knew what was going on. I ain’t, I ain’t, I ain’t dumb or nothing.
Q. But you didn’t hear anything about a robbery.
A. I didn’t hear nothing about no robbery.
Q. Do you remember in the tape we just listened to you said something about a robbery?
A. Yeah, he asked me, he asked me what hitting a lick mean. I say it can mean, it can mean robbery or anything. If you go back to the tape, you will see that.
Q. So, that day, nobody mentioned committing a robbery. Are we sure of that?
A. Yeah, nobody — nobody said it was a robbery. He said hit a lick.
¶ 34. As mentioned, Kelly maintained throughout his testimony that he had his back turned from the Conoco at the time of the shooting, and that he did not see either Hye or Benjamin, who were standing together in the road next to the Cono-co, ever walk onto the Conoco premises. Kelly’s testimony alone, of course, is insufficient to support the State’s theory that a killing occurred while Wells, Hye, and Benjamin were engaged in the act of robbery. But, when coupled with Linda’s testimony that she saw three individuals standing together in the rain at the Cono-co, and that two of those individuals physically attacked Mike while he was outside the vehicle, and that the third individual then shot Mike after Mike reentered the vehicle, the evidence becomes more than sufficient for a jury determination as to whether Hye was a principal by statute to the crime of capital murder with the underlying felony of robbery. Linda testified as follows:
After [Michael] gets out of the car, he tosses his little daytimer in, and I just kind of threw it in the back. And I look up and I see these three black males standing there. And I’m thinking, well, that’s strange. You know, it’s raining and they’re just standing there. And then just within seconds, they start walking toward the car. And I’m thinking: Oh, this doesn’t feel very safe. But then all of a sudden they kind of split off. And two of them are together, the two without a white towel. Then the one with the white towel starts going toward the driver’s side of the car and the other two gentlemen split off toward the passenger side.
The eerie, unnerving thing was, the one with the white towel just kept staring at me, right in the face. It was just like our eyes had locked and I just was watching him. And he was approaching the driver’s side. And that’s when I’m thinking maybe I’ll lock the car. But, he, instead of headed [sic] straight to the car, then he starts veering out a little, kind of fanning out, maybe moving toward the gas pumps. And I’m just watching him. And then all of a sudden, I just hear this noise, I mean, bumping the car. And at that pont, I look around and Mike is at the door, getting the door open and trying to get in the car, and there’s two — the other two boys are all on top of him, and one’s got him around the neck and the other’s got him on his arm, and he’s doing this (demonstrating), trying to get rid of them. And he’s trying to get in the car, and it’s a real struggle. And he manages to get into the car, and these other two guys are trying to get in the car with him, and he’s trying get rid of them. And he is a pretty big guy and these guys weren’t nearly his size. And he’s able to get most of the body parts out of the door, but he’s slamming the door on them, just like this, trying to get rid of them.
Q. Can you tell the members of the jury who — the two that were — or the individual that was stopping the door from shutting, the one with the towel on his head or the other two?
A. The guy with the towel on his head was not involved in this struggle at all.
Q. Okay.
A. It was the other two gentlemen. And as they were attempting to hold Mike back, to keep him from getting in the car or to do whatever, he is fighting them off. He gets in the car and manages to get the door closed, and he’s holding it with this hand.
Q. Which hand?
A. His right hand. He’s holding the door closed. And basically, because they were pulling him like this. He closed the door with his right hand, and reaches with his left hand to start the ignition and get it in gear. And in the meantime, he is saying, “We’ve got to get out of here.” He said, “Baby, we got to get out of here right now. We got to get out of here now.” And I looked up, and all of a sudden, I see the one with the white towel approaching the car very slowly and very definite. And I look up as he’s approaching the car and then all of a sudden, I see a gun — like this. And I’m thinking, he’s going to shoot me. I mean right between the eyes. I mean it was right in my face. And I’m not screamer and I’m not a yeller, I’m not any of those things. So, I’m just watching him. And he’s watching me. And then all of a sudden, he brings his left hand over, grabs the gun, and he aims it down toward Mike and, very, carefully, he picked his spot to shoot. And he got a shot off before Mike could get the car into gear. And when he shot, he shot through the driver’s window. It hit Mike in here as he’s doing this. (Demonstrating). Glass goes every where, all in my face, my shoulders, my arms and everything. And about that time, Mike obviously has gotten it in gear, so we immediately shoot out of there. I mean, we’re just gone. That car is just going as fast as his foot on the accelerator will allow it.
¶35. With the aforementioned record testimony in mind, the problem with both Hye’s and the dissent’s contention that the jury should have also been allowed to take into consideration Hye’s guilt as an accessory after the fact to felony murder, is that there is nothing but inferences upon inferences to support that proposed theory of the case. The State’s description of the weekend following the shooting as a “weekend alibi fest,” constitutes merely such an inference. The inference counts as nothing in the calculation of whether the State met its burden in introducing substantial evidence in support of its case against Hye. Henton v. State,
¶ 36. The trial court did, however, grant the following instructions, which we find fully covered Hye’s defense at trial that he was not a participant to the alleged crime: Jury instruction S-8, provided:
The guilt of a defendant in a criminal case may be established without proof that the defendant personally did every act constituting the offense alleged. The law recognizes that, ordinarily, anything a person can do for himself may also be accomplished by that person through the direction of another person as his or her agent, or by acting in concert with, or under the direction of, another person or persons in a joint effort or enterprise.
If another person is acting under the direction of the defendant or if the defendant joins another person and performs acts with the intent to commit a crime, then the law holds the defendant responsible for the acts and conduct of such other persons just as though the defendant had committed the acts or engaged in such conduct.
Before any defendant may be held criminally responsible for the acts of others, it is necessary that the accused deliberately associated himself in some way with the crime and participated in it with the intent to bring about the crime.
Of course, mere presence at the scene of a crime and knowledge that a crime is being committed are not sufficient to establish that a defendant either directed or aided and abetted the crime unless you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was a participant and not merely a knowing spectator.
In other words, you may not find any defendant guilty unless you find beyond a reasonable doubt that every element of the offense as defined in these instructions was committed by some person or persons, and that the defendant voluntarily participated in its commission with the intent to violate the law.
¶ 37. Jury instruction D-21, provided:
One who aids and abets another in the commission of a crime is guilty as a principal. However, in order to aid and abet the commission of a felony, Terry Hye must have done something to incite, encourage, or assist the actual perpetrator in the commission of the crime or participate in the design of the felony.
CONCLUSION
¶ 39. The judgment of the Court of Appeals upholding Hye’s conviction and vacating Hye’s sentence, remanding to the trial court for resentencing, is affirmed. Griffin and progeny authorizing lesser-nonincluded-offense instructions are hereby overruled. Section 99-19-5(1) and this Court’s precedential interpretation of it consistent with Hailey, et al, governs what lesser offenses may be charged to the jury.
¶ 40. CONVICTION OF CAPITAL MURDER, AFFIRMED. SENTENCE OF LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS IS VACATED, AND THIS CASE IS REMANDED TO THE JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT FOR RESENTENC-ING.
Notes
. Facts are taken verbatim from the opinion of the Court of Appeals.
. Mississippi Code Section 97-1-5(1) states in part:
Every person who shall be convicted of having concealed, received, or relieved any felon, or having aided or assisted any felon, knowing that the person had committed a felony, with intent to enable the felon to escape or to avoid arrest, trial, conviction or punishment after the commission of the felony, on conviction thereof shall be imprisoned in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections ....
. Section 99-19-5 is a derivative of the common law practice that permitted a jury to find a defendant guilty of any lesser offense necessarily included in the offense charged. See, e.g., Mease v. State,
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. Both Hye and the Amicus Curiae submit that Section 99-19-5(1) authorizes lesser-non-included-offense instructions via the "inferior offense” clause contained therein. We disagree. As mentioned above, we repeatedly have interpreted this section to apply only to an inferior offense necessarily included within the more serious offense. See Hailey,
. This goes beyond the pernicious concern this Court referred to in Stone,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
¶ 42. For nearly thirty years, the common law of the State of Mississippi has entitled' criminal defendants to have the juries they faced instructed on lesser-related offenses for which an evidentiary basis exists. But today, the majority discards that longstanding precedent by overruling Griffin v. State,
I. Lesser-related-offense jury instructions ought to remain viable under Mississippi law.
¶43. This Court is loathe to dispense with longstanding rules of law: “[A] former decision of this court should not be departed from, unless the rule therein announced is not only manifestly wrong, but mischievous.” McDaniel v. Cochran,
In stare decisis generally, we look for error, but, finding that, we look largely in the area of public or widespread disadvantage. Ordinarily, we do not overrule erroneous precedent unless it is “pernicious,”6 Stone v. Reichman-Crosby Co.,43 So.2d 184 , 190 (Miss.1949); “impractical,” Robinson v. State,434 So.2d 206 , 210 (Miss.1983) (Hawkins, J., concurring); or is “mischievous7 in effect, and resulting in detriment to the public.” Childress v. State,188 Miss. 573 , 577,195 So. 583 , 584 (1940). We look for “evils attendant upon a continuation of the old rule.” Tideway Oil Programs, Inc. v. Serio,431 So.2d 454 , 467 (Miss.1983).
Caves,
¶ 44. Almost three decades have passed since this Court decided, in Griffin v. State,
Griffin testified that he paid [victim] $10.00 to perform oral sex on him. While she was so engaged, however, Griffin insulted [victim] by referring to her as “bitch.” [Victim] responded by squeezing his penis and testicles and, in an effort to free himself, Griffin began to strike her about the face.... The two reconciled, however, and immediately returned to their amorous activity.
Griffin,
¶ 45. We reversed, stating:
This case presents a problem we encounter all too often. The prosecution charges the accused with a serious felony, only to have the defense offer a version of the facts rendering the accused far less culpable and, most important, subject to a far lesser punishment. If the evidence be such that a reasonable jury might have found the facts as the defense suggests them to have been, the accused of right is entitled to have the jury consider that option and be instructed to that effect.
Id. at 445. This Court continued that:
Whether simple assault is formally a lesser included offense to rape is not the point. We have before us a continuing factual scenario bracketed by a relatively brief period of time .... The facts suggest that Griffin may have been guilty of two possible courses of criminal conduct: rape and simple assault, the latter carrying a maximum penalty far less than the former. As the jury may on these facts reasonably have found Griffin guilty of simple assault but not guilty of rape — without any inconsistency in evidentiary or ultimate findings, it follows that Griffin was of right entitled to have the jury instructed on the lesser offense of simple assault.
Id. at 447-48.
¶ 46. The majority finds the holding in Griffin and its progeny to be “pernicious.” But, in support of its argument, the majority relies on opinions from the Court of Appeals which have been critical' of the Griffin rule, on the Uniform Criminal Rules Study Committee which advocates for its abandonment, on the laws of states other than Mississippi, and on the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of Rule 31(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
¶ 47. ' The majority opens its attack on the well-established Griffin rule with a salvo of opinions from our Court of Appeals, where the rule roundly has been castigated: “[sjeveral members of this court have expressed concerns with Mississippi’s approach to lesser non-included offenses.” Gebben v. State,
¶48. Mississippi Code Section 99-19-5(1) provides:
On an indictment for any offense the jury may find the defendant guilty of the offense as charged, or of any attempt to commit the same offense, or may find him guilty of an inferior offense, or other offense, the commission of which is necessarily included in the offense with which he is charged in the indictment
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Miss.Code Ann. § 99-19-5(1) (Rev.2007) (emphasis added). While Code Section 99-19-5(1) specifically contemplates lesser-included offenses, we recently have recognized that, “[a]s an exception, the Court has provided that ‘[a]n accused is entitled to a lesser-offense instruction only where there is an evidentiary basis in the record.’” Hall v. State,
¶ 49. Although no statute or federal or state constitutional provision explicitly authorizes the giving of lesser-related-offense instructions, it cannot be said that such is not grounded in “Mississippi precedent.” To the contrary, Mississippi precedent is the source of lesser-related-offense instructions under our state’s law. This Court consistently has held in the nearly thirty years since Griffin handed down that, “[i]f a lesser offense, as opposed to a lesser-included offense, arises from the same operative facts and has an evidentia-ry basis, we have held the defendant is entitled to an instruction for the lesser charge the same as if it were a lesser-included charge.” Thomas v. State,
Brooks v. State,
¶ 50. The unanimous Court
[Legislative suggestions concerning procedural rules ... will be followed unless determined to be an impediment to justice or an impingement upon the constitution. The inherent power of this Court to promulgate procedural rules emanates from the fundamental constitutional concept of separation of powers and the vesting of judicial powers in the courts.
Id. at 76 (citing Matthews v. State,
¶ 51. Here, Hye contends that the jury had before it evidence which could have led to his being found guilty of the lesser-related offense of accessory after the fact. Without doubt, this was a lesser offense than that pled in the indictment. Since the evidence to which Hye pointed, if believed beyond a reasonable doubt by the jurors, would have resulted in his being convicted of helping, or trying to help, another indictee in the capital-murder case after the commission of that crime, clearly it would have been related to the principal charge — thus, a lesser-related offense. This was Hye’s theory of his case; indeed, it was his defense. But, in the absence of an appropriate jury instruction, the jurors were powerless to address it. Hye’s theory was a legitimate one, well grounded in Mississippi law. But, contrary to our clear and powerful precedent, it was not brought to the jury’s attention by the trial court via appropriate instruction. Instead, the jury was given but two options in the guilt phase of the trial: finding Hye guilty of capital murder, or finding him not guilty.
1152. Despite this Court’s protracted adherence to Griffin, the majority expresses agreement with those members of the Court of Appeals who advocate for the rule’s demise. But neither the majority nor those learned judges persuasively explain why the decision in that case ought to be abandoned in order “to avoid the perpetuation of pernicious error.” Stone,
See Barber v. State,743 So.2d 1054 , 1059 (¶ 19) (Miss.Ct.App.1999) (Southwick, P.J., dissenting) (“An accused should not have the unrestricted right to search the statute books for some other related but not lesser-included offense with a lesser punishment, and insist upon an instruction on that crime.”); see also Williams v. State,53 So.3d 761 , 792 (Miss.Ct.App.2009) (Roberts, J., dissenting) (“[I]n the context of a prosecution of a felony, the entitlement to a lesser non-included offense instruction is contrary to Article 3, Section 27 of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890,” which requires indictment by a grand jury absent a sworn waiver.[9 ]), rev’d,53 So.3d 734 (Miss.2010); Brooks v. State,18 So.3d 859 , 876 (Miss.Ct.App.2008) (Carlton, J., dissenting) (“The current case exemplifies what the United States Supreme Court projected as unworkable jurisprudence lacking constitutional and statutory legs.”), rev’d in part,18 So.3d 833 (Miss.2009); McDonald v. State,784 So.2d 261 , 266 (Miss.Ct.App.2001) (Southwick, J., concurring) (“In effect an accused can indict himself for an offense that is not within the actual indictment but is potentially■within the facts and carries a lesser sentence.”).
Id. at 971 n. 6.
¶ 53. Judge Southwick, then a member of the Mississippi Court of Appeals, expressed the concern that “[a] jury should not be asked to determine the guilt of a person on an offense for which he was not even tried.” McDonald,
¶ 54. Any concern regarding factual development of a requested lesser-related instruction is ameliorated by the predicate which must be laid in order to support granting of the instruction: such an instruction will be given only where “a lesser offense, as opposed to a lesser-included offense, arises from the same operative facts and has an evidentiary basis.” Williams,
¶ 55. Moreover, the Griffin rule came into being to address the following problem, as articulated by this Court: “[t]he prosecution charges the accused with a serious felony, only to have the defense offer a version of the facts rendering the accused far less culpable and, most important, subject to a far lesser punishment.” Griffin,
A more natural, realistic and sound interpretation of the scope of “lesser included offense,” in line with our own views on the subject, is that defendant is entitled to invoke Rule 31(c) when a lesser offense is established by the evidence adduced at trial in proof of the greater offense, with the caveat that there must also be an “inherent” relationship between the greater and lesser offenses, i.e., they must relate to the protection of the same interests, and must be so related that in the general nature of these crimes, though not necessarily invariably, proof of the lesser offense is necessarily presented as part of the showing of the commission of the greater offense.
Whitaker,
The offense of vandalism is related to burglary since it is made an offense to protect the same societal interest — security of property — as burglary. It is often proven by the evidence that is offered to prove burglary. The defense evidence and theory here were consistent with the commission of vandalism and with an acquittal of burglary. The testimony of the owner of the Dragon Moon Disco, and the evidence that nothing in Jack’s was taken or disturbed, both of which were admitted for the purpose of establishing defendant’s guilt or innocence of the charged offense were sufficient to create a genuine conflict as to defendant’s intent when he, concededly, broke the window.
Geiger,
¶ 57. As the majority notes, California has retreated from its decision in Geiger. People v. Birks,
¶ 58. The majority further notes that, “soon after Griffin [and since Geiger ] was decided, ‘all arguable federal support for its conclusions has been withdrawn.’ ” Maj. Op. ¶ 21 (citing Birks,
¶ 59. In Schmuck, the defendant was indicted for and convicted of mail fraud. Schmuck,
¶ 60. But a federal interpretation of a federal rule of criminal procedure, while interesting, is of no moment to this Court’s analysis of controlling Mississippi precedent or court rules, and certainly does not provide support for the argument that the Griffin rule is “pernicious” and should be struck down. In fact, Mississippi’s Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court Practice provide, in pertinent part, that “[i]n criminal cases if different counts are charged in the indictment or if the court instructs the jury as to related or lesser
¶ 61. Likewise, in Hopkins v. Reeves, Nebraska indicted Reeves for two counts of felony murder. Hopkins,
¶ 62. The district court rejected Reeves’s claim, but the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit reversed, reasoning that “the constitutional error was the same as that in Beck,” because Reeves “could have been convicted and sentenced for either second degree murder or manslaughter .... ” Hopkins,
¶63. The Supreme Court considered “whether Beck requires state trial courts to instruct juries on offenses that are not lesser included offenses of the charged crime under state law.” Id. at 90,
The Court of Appeals apparently would recognize a constitutional right to an instruction on any offense that bears a resemblance to the charged crime and is supported by the evidence. Such an affirmative obligation is unquestionably a greater limitation on a State’s prerogative to structure its criminal law than is Beck’s rule that a State may not erect a capital-specific, artificial barrier to the provision of instructions on offenses that actually are lesser included offenses under state law.
Id. at 97-98,
¶ 64. The Court declined to extend Beck to require state courts to provide lesser-related-offense instructions where state law prohibited or did not recognize them. The Court, then, was not referring to the “practice of allowing lesser non-included-offense instructions” when it opined that lesser-related-offense instructions would be “not only unprecedented, but also unworkable.” Maj. Op. ¶ 23 (citing Hopkins,
¶ 65. The majority next turns to policy arguments in an attempt to support its repudiation of the longstanding Griffin rule. According to the majority, “[b]y allowing a criminal defendant ‘to seek and obtain conviction for a lesser [nonincluded] offense whose elements the state has neither pled nor sought to prove’ gives the defendant a ‘superior trial right.’” Maj. Op. ¶ 19 (quoting Birks,
Specifically, a jury may no longer be instructed on a so-called “lesser related” or “lessfer] non-included” offense (a lesser offense which does not meet the criteria for a lesser included offense instruction) .... The approach of section (d) avoids the difficulties inherent when a defendant seeks to place an uncharged, non-included offense before the jury, thereby diminishing the prosecuting attorney’s traditional and exclusive discretion over charging decisions. Section (d) also restores symmetry, as both the prosecution and the defense may seek an instruction on a lesser included offense, while the Constitution forbids a prosecuting attorney from receiving an instruction on a lesser offense whose elements are not included in the indictment.
Matthew Steffey, Mississippi Criminal Procedure: Proposed Rules and Com
¶ 66. But the Griffin Court addressed the concern over uncharged offenses being placed before the jury and the purported diminution of prosecutorial discretion, for it places upon the defense the burden to adduce evidence at trial, “such that a reasonable jury might have found the facts as the defense suggests them to have been.” Griffin,
¶ 67. The majority echoes the concerns of the Criminal Rules Study Committee: “[Particularly when the State does not consent, the giving of lesser-nonincluded-offense instructions invites the jury to convict the defendant of a crime that no party may have attempted to establish beyond a reasonable doubt.” Maj. Op. ¶ 27. But as mentioned above, the defendant, by requesting the lesser-related-offense instruction, waives the right to indictment on the offense for which he or she seeks the instruction. Hall,
¶ 68. Additionally, the Criminal Rules Study Committee and the majority imply that the Griffin rule promotes asymmetry, because “only the criminal defendant may request a lesser non-included offense instruction, as constitutional notice considerations forbid the prosecution from receiving an instruction on a lesser offense whose elements are not included in the indictment.” Maj. Op. ¶20. It is true that “only the defendant, and not the State, may request a lesser[-related]-offense instruction.” Hall,
¶ 69. Furthermore, symmetry in a criminal case never before has concerned this Court, as can be observed in the context of a lesser-included offense instruction: “in a murder case our law allows the prosecution to obtain a manslaughter instruction, almost willynilly, but [ ... ] the defendant is not always so entitled.” Jackson v. State,
¶ 70. Interestingly, today’s reversal of Griffin will have a restrictive effect on the State’s ability to engage in plea bargaining. Long before Griffin, this Court held that the trial court was without jurisdiction to accept the defendant’s guilty plea to accessory after the fact, since accessory after the fact is not a lesser-ineluded offense of attempted armed robbery. Box v. State,
¶71. Because I would not overrule Griffin and its progeny and because I find that lesser-related-offense instructions which are supported by the evidence ought to remain a viable component of Mississippi criminal law and practice, I dissent.
II. Terry Hye presented sufficient evidence to support an accessory-after-the-fact instruction.
¶ 72. I turn now to analyze whether Hye was entitled to an accessory-after-the-fact instruction. We review a grant or denial of a jury instruction under an abuse-of-discretion standard, considering the jury instructions “as a whole ‘to determine if the jury was properly instructed.’ ” Clayton v. State,
¶ 73. A criminal defendant “is entitled to have jury instructions given which present his theory of the case.” Clayton,
¶ 74. The trial court refused the following jury instructions requested by Hye:
Instruction D-26: The Court instructs the Jury that if you are unable to find the Defendant, Terry Hye, Jr., guilty of the felony crime of capital murder then you should continue your deliberations to consider the elements of the felony crime of Accessory After the Fact to Murder.
Instruction D-28: To find Terry Hye, Jr. guilty of Accessory After the Fact, you must find to [sic] following:
(1) a completed felony has been committed;
(2) Terry Hye concealed, received, relieved, aided, or assisted a felon, knowing that such person had committed a felony; and
(3) such assistance or aid was rendered with the intent to enable such felon to escape or avoid arrest, trial, conviction, or punishment after the commission of the felony.
Mississippi Code Section 97-1-5(1) sets forth the elements of the crime of accessory after the fact:
Every person who shall be convicted of having concealed, received, or relieved any felon, or having aided or assisted any felon, knowing that the person had committed a felony, with intent to enable the felon to escape or to avoid arrest, trial, conviction or punishment after the commission of the felony, on conviction thereof shall be imprisoned in the custody of the Department of Corrections
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Miss.Code Ann. § 97-1-5(1) (Rev.2014). Because the requested jury instruction on the elements of the crime of accessory after the fact tracks the language of the statute, it cannot be said that the proposed jury instruction “incorrectly states the law.” The State does not dispute this and does not contend that the proposed jury instructions are “fairly covered elsewhere in the instructions.” The State vehemently objected to the proposed jury instructions, and the trial court agreed by refusing to give them. Thus, the dispute hinges on the existence of a sufficient evidentiary foundation to support the giving of Hye’s proposed accessory-after-the-fact jury instructions.
¶ 75. This Court consistently has articulated a low threshold with regard to what a defendant must show in the record to support a tendered “theory-of-the-case” instruction. “A defendant is entitled to have instructions on his theory of the case presented, even though the evidence that supports it is weak, inconsistent, or of doubtful credibility.” Banyard v. State,
¶ 76. Where one defendant, tried for the murder of his wife, testified that he and his wife were involved at the time in an escalating argument in which his wife threatened him and cut him with a knife at the time of the killing, this Court unanimously reversed and remanded for a new trial because the trial court failed to instruct the jury on the defendant’s alternative heat-of-passion manslaughter theory. Clayton,
¶77. In another instance, this Court reversed a defendant’s conviction of armed robbery and remanded because the trial judge failed to give the jury a requested accessory-after-the-fact instruction. Gangl v. State,
¶ 78. In the present case, Hye asserted that evidence adduced at trial supported his proposed accessory-after-the-fact jury instructions. Hye cited Alonzo Kelly’s testimony to show that Hye had colluded with Kelly, Benjamin, and Wells to concoct an exculpatory version of events. According to Hye, this is supported by the State’s description .in closing argument of the Thursday (when the shooting occurred) to Monday (when the police interviews took place) as “a weekend alibi fest.” Further,
¶ 79.' Not only was evidence adduced at trial that the group, following the shooting, frantically attempted to concoct alibis, that Hye initially lied to police, and that Hye provided shelter to Benjamin at Hye’s aunt’s house in Pascagoula, but also that both Hye and Kelly testified that the robbery was not the product of planning. Kelly
¶ 80. It is true that a defendant cannot be both a principal to the crime and an accessory after the fact. Mangum v. State,
¶ 81. All the accused must do is “point to evidence in the record from which a jury reasonably could find the defendant not guilty of the crime, with which the defendant is charged and at the same time find the defendant guilty of the ‘lesser offense.’ ” Brazzle,
¶ 82. Hye argued in his petition for writ of certiorari that “there was sufficient evidence, certainly more than necessary under the ‘meager, unlikely evidence’ standard in Clayton to support the instruction.” We agree. The standard is not concerned with the quantity or quality of the evidence presented, but rather whether any evidentiary support, however tenuous it may be, exists to support giving the defendant’s requested jury instruction. From the witness stand, Hye denied going to the Conoco station with the intent to participate in a robbery, he denied involvement in the robbery, and he denied knowing that Wells possessed a gun. Hye testified that he simply wanted to have someone buy cigarettes for him. Kelly testified that there was no plan to rob. With regard to presenting an alternative theory of defense at trial, which the Court of Appeals determined that Hye had failed to do, Hye testified that, after the robbery and shooting, he hosted Tevin Benjamin at his aunt’s Pascagoula home. Hye admitted that he initially lied to police, and in so doing he seemed to be trying to assist some of the other suspects. Officer Gray, who interviewed Hye, testified that Hye initially told police that three people remained at the stop sign as the murder transpired. And Kelly testified that the group got together over the weekend to concoct alibis, which the State labeled in its closing argument as a “weekend alibi fest.”
¶ 83. We cannot, therefore, concur with our colleagues in the majority that “there is nothing but inferences upon inferences to support [Hye’s] proposed theory of the case” and that “Hye’s proposed accessory after the fact instruction lacked an eviden-tiary basis.” Maj. Op. ¶ 35. To the contrary, ample evidence adduced at trial supported Hye’s proposed accessory-after-the-fact instruction. This Court repeatedly has held that: “the trial court should instruct the jury about a defendant’s theories of defense, justification, or excuses that are supported by the evidence, no matter how meager or unlikely, and the
¶ 84. In the Court of Appeals, the State argued' that “with respect to the granting of lesser offense instructions, an evidentia-ry basis cannot lie in tenuous connections to the evidence which would require the jury to ‘resort[ ] to speculation or conjecture.’ ” Brazzle,
¶85. Here, Linda Porter was shown neither an in-person nor a photo lineup of suspects, and she testified that she recognized them at trial “from the pictures in the newspaper.” Therefore, Brazzle’s assertion on appeal that “the jury ... was free to believe that she was mistaken about her identification and find that Braz-zle had acquired the vehicle from Turner after the fact, as he claimed,” warranted the refusal by the trial court of an accessory-after-the-fact instruction. Id. The jury there reasonably could not find that Braz-zle was a mere accessory after the fact. Here, a reasonable jury, properly instructed, could have ‘ come to the conclusion,based on the evidence adduced at trial, that Hye was not guilty of capital murder, but was guilty as an accessory after the fact to capital murder. As in Gangl, “a serious doubt may have arisen in the minds of the jurors as to whether” Hye was a principal in the robbery underlying the murder of Michael Porter, or whether his participation in the crime was limited to his having given after-the-fact assistance to the perpetrators of this dastardly and senseless crime. See Gangl,
¶ 86. I would hold that Hye presented a sufficient evidentiary foundation to support the giving of an accessory-after-the-fact instruction, since a reasonable jury could have come to the conclusion that he was guilty of the crime of accessory after the fact. Because the jury was not instructed on Hye’s accessory-after-the-fact theory, I would reverse the judgment and remand the case to the Circuit Court of Jackson County for a new trial.
DICKINSON, P.J., AND KING, J., JOIN THIS OPINION. CHANDLER, J., JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
. "Pernicious” is defined as "having a harmful effect, especially in a gradual or subtle way.” Compact Oxford English Dictionary 842 (2d rev. ed.2003). It is derived from the Latin, pemiciosus, meaning "destructive.” Id.
. "Mischievous” is defined as "(1) causing or disposed to mischief,” or "(2) intended to cause trouble.” Compact Oxford English Dictionary 720 (2d rev. ed.2003).
. Robertson, J., authored the Griffin decision and was joined by Roy Noble Lee, C.3., Hawkins, and Dan M. Lee, PJJ., and Prather, Sullivan, Anderson, Griffin, and Zuccaro, JJ.
. This concern is discussed in a footnote in Griffin: "Any possible concern that simple assault, because technically not a lesser included offense, is not within the indictment for rape dissipates in the face of Griffin's request for the simple assault instruction. Griffin thus waived any inadequacy in the indictment.” Griffin,
. Rule 31(c) states that “[a] defendant may be found guilty of any of the following: (1) an offense necessarily included in the offense charged; (2) an attempt to commit the offense charged; or (3) an attempt to commit an offense necessarily included in the offense charged, if the attempt is an offense in its own right.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 31(c).
. Proposed Rule 23.2(d) reads as follows: "The jury may be instructed on any of the following: (1) an offense necessarily included in the offense charged; or (2) an attempt to commit the offense necessarily included therein, if such attempt is an attempt.” Matthew Steffey, Mississippi Criminal Procedure: Proposed Rules and Comments, 31 Miss. C.L.Rev. (Special Issue) 1, 155 (2013).
. Neither this proposed rule nor the accompanying suggestion for a comment has been adopted by this Court.
. It is this low threshold which persuades me that the evidence in the present case supports Hye’s requested accessory-after-the-fact instruction.
. Where the trial judge refused an accessory-after-the-fact instruction "since accessory after the fact is not a lesser included offense of robbery,” this Court held that "[playing obedience to form over substance misses the point.” Gangl,
. "Every person who shall be an accessory to any felony, before the fact, shall be deemed and considered a principal, and shall be indicted and punished as such....” Miss.Code Ann. § 97-1-3 (Rev.2014).
.Kelly pled guilty to accessory after the fact. According to Kelly, who was standing at a stop sign down the street, "Terry and Tevin was standing in the road, Darwin went to the parking lot. I heard a gunshot. It happened that quick,” at which point the entire group ran away. The State argues that Kelly’s testimony, plus the testimony of Linda Porter that two black men tussled with her husband just before Wells shot him, proves that Hye was a principal and that Kelly was an accessory after the fact.
. ”[I]t” refers to "hitting a lick," which Kelly testified "mean like going to get, going to money. You fixing to get some money or something.” Hye testified that his understanding of the meaning of "hitting a lick” was "selling dope or weed or something.”
. Hye was sixteen at the time and could not purchase cigarettes for himself, so he would ask adults to go into gas stations to purchase them for him.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and in the result:
¶ 41. I agree with Justice Pierce that there was no evidentiary basis for Hye’s requested accessory-after-the-fact instructions and would affirm Hye’s conviction. But, unlike Justice Pierce, I would not abandon this State’s longstanding adherence to the rule that a defendant is entitled to an instruction on a lesser-related offense if justified by the evidence. I join Justice Kitchens’s well-reasoned analysis of that issue.
KITCHENS, J., JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
