Lead Opinion
ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
This mаtter is before us on Lynch's Petition to Transfer from the Third District Court of Appeals. In an opinion reported at
The facts relevant to this issue are аs set out by the Court of Appeals:
On January 12, 1988, the defendant, who resided with his parents, went to his mother's bedroom and retrieved a .410 bolt action shotgun. Whilе his father, the victim, was in the shower, defendant entered the bathroom, positioned the gun within 2 to 8 inches of his father's body and fired.
Defendant then callеd 911 but when asked his name he hung up. The defendant fled from the residence on foot.
When police arrived at the residence they discovered the victim lying on the kitchen floor. Officer Schollian asked the victim who shot him and he replied that his son had shot him. The victim advised police that his son hаd left on foot.
Shortly thereafter, defendant was apprehended as he was walking on the street. The defendant had blood all over his faсe, hands, and clothing. The blood was his father's. Defendant was arrest ed and his rights were read to him. Defendant indicated that he understood those rights and asked, "How's my dad?" A video-taped statement was taken from the defendant in which he claimed the blood on his clothing was from hunting deer.
We also notе from the record the following additional facts. The shot entered the victim's body on the lateral aspect of his right arm a few inches abovе the elbow, exited the opposite side of the arm, and re-entered his body on the lateral side of the chest a few inches under the arm. Thе shot penetrated the chest in a downward fashion.
At trial, Lynch testified that there had been problems between him and his father and that, inspired by religious principles, Lynch had planned to shoot and wound his father so that, during his father's hospitalization, they would be able to work out the differences bеtween them. Lynch also claimed that he was insane at the time of the shooting. Upon this evidence Lynch claims he is entitled to an instruction on involuntary manslaughter.
As the Court of Appeals correctly pointed out, a two-step inquiry is required to determine whether an instruction on a lesser included offense should be given. Jones v. State (1982), Ind.,
Murder is defined as knowingly or intentionally killing another human being. Ind.Code § 85-42-1-1(1). Involuntary manslaughter is defined as occurring when a person kills another human being while committing or attempting to commit a battery, Ind.Code § 85-42-1-4, and contemplates an incidеntal killing that occurs during a battery. Ingram v. State (1989), Ind.,
The majority in the Court оf Appeals concluded that the prosecutor had drafted the information in such a way as to preclude an instruction on involuntary manslаughter. Although the majority is correct that, under certain cireumstances, an information can be drafted to preclude an instruction on a lеsser included offense, this is not such a case.
The second part of the test is to determine whether there is evidence before the jury that the included offense was committed, Jones v. State,
We conclude, as did Judge Garrard in dissent, that the evidence supports the giving of the lesser included оffense instruction. This evidence includes Lynch's testimony that his intent was only to injure his father. Also, Lynch's calling the police immediately after the shooting сould support the conclusion that the injury had been more serious than he had intended or that he did not intend for his father to die. Similarly, reasonable minds could conclude that the initial entry of the bullet into the arm could negate an intent to kill. Al though the evidence is sufficient to support a cоnviction for murder, that conclusion is not compelled. The evidence shows a serious dispute concerning Lynch's intent.
When reviewing the refusal оf any tendered instruction, we determine: (1) whether the tendered instruction correctly states the law, (2) whether there was evidence in the record to support the giving of the instruction, and (8) whether the substance of the tendered instruction is covered by the other instructions given. Ingram v. State,
Accordingly, we now grant transfer, vacate the Court of Appeals decision reported at
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I cannot agree that there is a serious evidentiary dispute about whether Michael R. Lynch killed his father knowingly.
The majority opinion correсtly states the legal standard Indiana appellate courts have recently used to determine whether involuntary manslaughter is a lesser includеd offense to the offense of knowing murder, with which Lynch is charged. In my view, this case turns on how seriously we should treat Lynch's testimony that when he aimed a 410 shotgun directly at the center of his father's body and pulled the trigger, he intended only a "rude touching." To reverse Lynch's conviction, I think one must be willing to say that suсh a shooter is unaware of the high probability of a fatality when he fires a shot into somebody's abdomen at point blank range with that kind of a weapon.
