We have for review the decision of the Second District Court of Appeal in
Jaimes v. State,
We have jurisdiction based on a misapplication of our decision in
Weaver. See
art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const.;
see also Wallace v. Dean,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the evening of July 9, 2004, Jaimes and three friends entered Judy’s Place, a bar-restaurant located in Clewiston, Florida. An altercation began between Jaimes’s group and several patrons of the bar, and Jaimes and his friends were asked to leave by the owner. John Horns-by, a musician who was performing in the bar that evening, testified at trial that a larger barroom brawl began when Jaimes punched him in the head. When the brawl subsided several minutes later, Jaimes and his friends exited the bar. Once outside, Jaimes allegedly struck victims Richard Miller and Michael Proctor with a wooden club. Miller and Proctor were also beaten with sticks wielded by Jaimes and his friends. Karen Lamb, Miller’s fiancée, watched the confrontation from the front seat of Miller’s vehicle. Jaimes and his friends fled in a pickup truck, but were apprehended by police shortly thereafter. Miller and Proctor were taken to the emergency room and treated for their injuries.
Following his arrest, Jaimes was charged by information with two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon and one count of simple battery, each against a different victim. Under Florida law, an aggravated battery may be committed either by causing great bodily harm to the victim in the course of committing a battery, or by committing a battery through the use of a deadly weapon. See § 784.045(l)(a)l.-2., Fla. Stat. (2004). At trial, although Jaimes was only charged with the deadly weapon form of the offense, the jury was erroneously instructed that it could also find Jaimes guilty if it determined that he had caused great bodily harm to the victims. No objection was made to this instruction. Further, the jury was given a verdict form which allowed it to specifically choose between the two forms of aggravated battery. After deliberation, the jury found Jaimes guilty of simple battery against John Hornsby, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon against Michael Proctor, and aggravated battery by causing great bodily harm against Richard Miller. Jaimes was sentenced to concurrent terms of twenty-five years in prison for each count of aggravated battery, and 364 days in prison for the count of simple battery.
Jaimes appealed his convictions and sentences to the Second District, raising two claims. In his first claim, Jaimes argued that it was error to convict him of aggravated battery by causing great bodily harm when the information did not charge him with that form of the offense.
See Jaimes,
Although we recognize that it was error to convict Mr. Jaimes of aggravated battery' by causing great bodily harm on Mr. Miller when that crime was not charged in the information, we affirm because defense counsel failed to preserve the issue for review on appeal. Defense counsel made no objection to the jury instructions or verdict form, and we conclude such error is not fundamental in Mr. Jaimes’s circumstances. See State v. Weaver,957 So.2d 586 (Fla.2007).
Jaimes,
Jaimes sought review in this Court, alleging that the decision of the Second District is in conflict with this Court’s decision
*448
in
Weaver.
1
We granted review,
Jaimes v. State,
ANALYSIS
We begin our analysis with an overview of the law concerning the preservation of a jury instruction error. As a general matter, instructions to a jury are subject to the contemporaneous objection rule. Pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.390(d), “No party may raise on appeal the giving or failure to give an instruction unless the party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which the party objects and the grounds of the objection.” Absent such an objection at trial, an unpreserved error may be reviewed on appeal only if it rises to the level of fundamental error.
See Reed v. State,
In defining the scope of the fundamental error doctrine, we have explained that a fundamental error is one that “goes to the foundation of the case or goes to the merits of the cause of action.”
Sanford v. Rubin,
It is a fundamental principle of due process that a defendant may not be convicted of a crime that has not been charged by the state.
See Thornhill v. Alabama,
In the present case, there is no question that the defendant was convicted of an offense that was never charged. The information charged Jaimes with committing a battery against Richard Miller, and that he did so by using a deadly weapon.
See
§ 784.045(1)(a)2. However, the jury was erroneously instructed that it could convict Jaimes of aggravated battery if it determined that, in the course of committing a battery, Jaimes had caused Miller great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement.
See
§ 784.045(1)(a)1. The jury then convicted Jaimes based specifically on the fact that he had caused the victim great bodily harm, despite the fact that the extent of the victim’s injuries was never an element of the offense as it was charged in the information. Thus, Jaimes was convicted of a form of aggravated battery which requires an element not contained in the charging document, and his right to due process was therefore violated. The guilty verdict in this case clearly “could not have been obtained without the assistance of the alleged error.”
Delva,
In denying relief on this claim, the district court relied on this Court’s decision in
Weaver,
On appeal, the Second District, applying its previous decisions in
Dixon v. State,
In overturning Weaver’s conviction, the Second District explained that it was constrained by its prior precedents in
Dixon
and
Vega. See Weaver,
This Court granted review and disapproved of the absolute rule adopted by the district court. Previously, in
State v. Delva,
[although Delva involved the trial court’s omission from the jury instructions of an element of an offense that the defendant did not contest ... the same principle applies to the erroneous inclusion of an element that the State does not argue is present and about which it presents no evidence. As with the omission of an element of the offense that is not contested, the erroneous inclusion of an element that the State concedes does not apply, and concerning which it presents no evidence, is not “pertinent or material to what the jury must consider in order to convict.”
Weaver,
In Weaver, the record demonstrated — as the Second District had recognized — that the State never argued at trial that Weaver had caused great bodily harm to the police officer, nor had any evidence been presented regarding the victim’s injuries. See id. at 589. We concluded that because the uncharged version of the offense was never at issue, it could be assumed that the jury’s general verdict of guilty was not based on the uncharged theory. See id. In such cases, we explained, “We are confident that ... the jury’s verdict is based not on elements that were never at issue, but on the elements on which the State based its arguments, and which the defendant contested at trial.” Id. For that reason, we held that the faulty instruction in Weaver did not rise to the level of fundamental error. See id.
*451
Although the errors in
Jaimes
and
Weaver
— an instruction on an uncharged version of a charged offense — are essentially the same, the rule we adopted in
Weaver
does not apply to the circumstances presented here. In
Weaver,
our holding was based on an underlying ambiguity in the jury’s verdict, namely that where a
general verdict
is returned, it is unclear on the face of the verdict whether the jury convicted the defendant of the charged or uncharged form of the offense. Where the record shows that no argument has been made and no evidence has been presented on the uncharged version, it may be assumed that the defendant was convicted of the form of the offense on which the state actually based its arguments.
See Weaver,
In the present case, however, the jury returned a
specific verdict
in favor of an uncharged form of aggravated battery.
See Jaimes,
As this Court has long recognized, “one charged with a crime cannot be indicted for one offense and convicted or sentenced for another, even though the offenses are closely related and may be of [the] same general character.”
Perkins v. Mayo,
REMEDY
Under section 924.34, Florida Statutes (2010), when an appellate court vacates a conviction but determines that the evidence establishes the defendant’s guilt as to a lesser included offense, “the appellate court shall reverse the judgment and direct the trial court to enter judgment for the ... lesser included offense.” Here, the jury was instructed on aggravated battery with simple battery as a lesser included offense. To convict Jaimes of simple battery, the jury was required to find that Jaimes intentionally touched or struck the victim against his will or intentionally caused the victim bodily harm.
See
§ 784.03. To convict Jaimes of
aggra-
*452
voted
battery, the jury was required to find, first, that Jaimes had committed each element of simple battery under section 784.08, and second, that Jaimes had committed the battery by using a deadly weapon.
See
§ 784.045. Thus, while the information did not charge the form of aggravated battery on which the jury based its conviction, the elements of simple battery were both supported by the charging document and the proof at trial, and each element of the offense was determined by the jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
See State v. Sigler,
CONCLUSION
Because the defendant was specifically convicted of an offense based on elements that were never charged, we find that fundamental error occurred in this case. Accordingly, we quash the portion of the district court’s decision affirming Jaimes’s conviction for aggravated battery by causing great bodily harm and remand to the Second District with instructions to direct the entry of a verdict for the lesser included offense of simple battery.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Regarding Jaimes’s second claim, the Second District determined that the trial court had erred in sentencing Jaimes to twenty-five years' incarceration on each count of aggravated battery when the statutory maximum for that offense was fifteen years.
Jaimes,
. We have cautioned, however, that "the doctrine of fundamental error should be applied only in the rare cases where a jurisdictional error appears or where the interests of justice present a compelling demand for its application.”
Ray,
. For example, this Court has held that a charging document is fundamentally defective where it fails to allege one or more essential elements of an offense, the reason being that such an indictment or information "fails to charge a crime under the laws of the state.”
State v. Gray,
