Our decision reversing the judgment of conviction was delivered on March 14, 2002. McCoy v. State,
Contrary to the State’s urging, our opinion in this case did not hold that the State must raise every possible alternative ground for affirmance in the trial court, before it may be considered on appeal. Rather, our holding was that, based on the particular facts of this case and the specific issue raised by the State, the affirmance rule was not applicable. As we pointed out in the opinion, this court has consistently recognized that a trial court is required to give a model instruction unless it finds that the instruction does not accurately state the law. See In Re: Arkansas Model Criminal Instructions,
In the present case, the trial court’s ruling was such that Appellant was not entitled to have the jury consider any. instruction on the lesser-included offense of attempted second-degree murder. We concluded that this ruling was erroneous. Notwithstanding, the State invited us to affirm Appellant’s conviction on the ground that the model instruction proffered by him was not a correct statement of the law. The State did not, however, challenge the instruction in the trial court. Because a presumption of accuracy attends all model jury instructions, the burden was on the State to convince the trial court otherwise, in order to rebut the presumption. Thus, under the circumstances, the State was required to raise this particular issue below if it intended to rely upon it on appeal. Because it did not, we properly declined to address the argument.
Rehearing denied.
