Opinion
This case poses the question whether it is proper, during voir dire of prospective jurors, for a trial court to inform them that jurors have no legal authority to engage in what is known as “jury nullification,” and to solicit their assurances that, if chosen to serve as jurors, they will follow the law as stated to them by the court and not substitute their own views of what the law should be.
The answer is, “Yes.” As we will explain, although jurors have the “power” to engage in jury nullification, they have no legal authority to do so. “ ‘Nullification is, by definition, a violation of a juror’s oath to apply the law as instructed by the court. . . . We categorically reject the idea that, in a society committed to the rule of law, jury nullification is desirable or that courts may permit it to occur
when it is within their authority to
prevent.’ [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Williams
(2001)
Defendant Frank Rudolph Estrada walked into the Nugget Market in Davis, took two bags of charcoal and a package of sausage, placed them under his coat, and left the store without paying for the items. Having witnessed this, Rodolfo Granados, Jr., a loss prevention officer, followed defendant out of the store, caught up with him, and announced “security” and “stop.” Defendant turned around and hit Granados in the ear with his fist. Granados grabbed defendant and, in Granados’s words, “[b]oth of us had each other in somewhat of a headlock hold by a light pole that was pinned between us. He said something to the effect of ‘Let me go or I’ll kick your ass.’ I told him to give up, that one way or the other he was coming back with me. He was placed under a citizen’s arrest. He at that time became more compliant. I was able to put handcuffs on him.” In the meantime, defendant’s accomplice dropped a bottle of cognac, threw a can of lighter fluid at a clerk, ran out of the store, and escaped.
When questioned by a police officer, defendant admitted he and his accomplice had agreed to enter the store to steal charcoal and lighter fluid. According to defendant, they planned to use it to light a fire in order to stay warm. The incident occurred in the month of January.
Defendant was charged with attempted robbery, burglary, and petty theft of retail merchandise, and was accused of committing the crimes while released on bail or on his own recognizance.
The defense called no witnesses at trial. During closing argument to the jury, defense counsel conceded defendant’s guilt on the petty theft charge, argued the attempted robbery charge was unwarranted, and left the burglary “up to you [the jurors] because it makes sense.” Counsel implored the jury: “Convict [him] of a petty theft. We’re talking sausage. . . . That’s what this case is about, petty theft that just got a little overdrawn.”
The strategy proved successful because the jury acquitted defendant of attempted robbery, finding him guilty only of burglary and petty theft. The trial court found “defendant was on bail bond status at the time of [the] offense in this case.”
The probation report reflected that defendant had numerous prior arrests and adjudications for committing theft-related crimes. Thus, the trial court sentenced him, in part, to the middle term of two years in state prison for the burglary.
Defendant appeals. His sole contention is the trial court erred when, during voir dire of prospective jurors, it solicited their assurances that, if chosen as jurors in this case, they would not engage in “jury nullification.”
We disagree and shall affirm the judgment.
DISCUSSION
I
During voir dire, the trial court explained that those prospective jurors who were ultimately selected to serve on the jury would have “two fundamental duties”—(1) to “determine the facts. You will decide what happened or didn’t happen in this case,” and (2) to listen to the law given to the jurors by the court, and to “apply it to the facts as you have determined them and that’s how you arrive at your verdict.”
Defendant unsuccessfully objected when the trial court stated to the prospective jurors: “I need to have your assurance, if you will, without reservation that you will follow my instructions on the law in this
This instruction was loosely derived 2 from then-section 8.5(b)(19) of the California Standards of Judicial Administration, which stated a trial court should include the following inquiry during voir dire of prospective jurors: “It is important that I have your assurance that you will, without reservation, follow my instructions and rulings on the law and will apply that law to this case. To put it somewhat differently, whether you approve or disapprove of the court’s rulings or instructions, it is your solemn duty to accept as correct these statements of the law. You may not substitute your own idea of what you think the law ought to be. Will all of you follow the law as given to you by me in this case?” 3
II
Defendant’s appellate counsel acknowledges that the trial court had, in counsel’s words, “unquestioned” authority to tell the prospective jurors “to follow the law as instructed by the court.” He also concedes that, in his words, the court had “no duty to instruct the [prospective jurors] as to their inherent power to nullify the law. While such power remains inherent in the jury system, it should not be encouraged or glorified.” However, counsel complains the court went further, telling prospective jurors that, if selected to serve on the jury, they had, in his words, “no power of nullification, nor may they exercise it.” This, he argues, “amounted to a[n] impermissible invasion of the province of the jury and a denial, of the historic power of nullification held by all criminal juries.” “By instructing the [prospective jurors] that they were forbidden to engage in nullification,” he says, “the court removed from the Sixth Amendment the jury’s role” as “the conscience of the community” and “the final barrier [against] unjust prosecutions and criminal convictions.”
As a practical matter, however, some of the prospective jurors reasonably may have construed the inquiry as an admonition that, if selected to serve on the jury, they had no right of nullification, i.e., no authority to disregard the trial court’s instructions on the law and, instead, to decide what they think is “right” under the circumstances, regardless of the law.
Thus, rather than “split hairs” over the wording of the trial court’s inquiry, we will tackle a question left unanswered by the California Supreme Court in
Williams, supra,
Ill
What is referred to as “jury nullification” is a jury’s “defiance of the law.”
{U.S.
v.
Thomas
(2d Cir. 1997)
An extensive discussion of jury nullification is contained in
Williams, supra,
Jurors have a duty to follow the law as stated to them by the trial court.
{Williams, supra,
Accordingly, “it is important not to encourage or glorify the jury’s power to disregard the law. While that power has, on some occasions, achieved just results, it also has led to verdicts based upon bigotry and racism. A jury that disregards the
For this reason, the trial court “need not instruct the jury concerning its power to nullify the law . . . .” (Williams, supra, 25 Cal.4th at pp. 456, 457.)
Courts also have the authority to prevent jury nullification from occurring.
(Williams, supra,
Since the court has the authority to discharge a juror who is engaging in juror nullification, it logically follows that the court can attempt to prevent an occurrence of juror nullification by informing prospective jurors at the outset that jurors have no authority to disregard the law, and by obtaining their assurance that they will not do so if chosen to serve on the jury.
We reject defendant’s claim that “such a directive to the jury amounts to an unwarranted intrusion into the province of the jury, as guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.” Long ago, the United States Supreme Court held that the exclusion of prospective jurors because they “could not be trusted to ‘abide by existing law’ and ‘to follow conscientiously the instructions’ of the trial judge” does not violate a defendant’s rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments.
{Lockett v. Ohio
(1978)
In sum, a “nullifying jury is essentially a lawless jury”
{Williams, supra,
Also unconvincing is his argument that an antinullification instruction is improper because it will result in “a direct denial of the historic power of nullification held by all criminal juries.” The irony is that, as a practical matter, a jury has the power to nullify an antinullification instruction.
In fact, that is what occurred in this case. Defense counsel conceded to the
Having achieved what he requested from the jury, defendant obviously was not prejudiced by the antinullification inquiry because, in acquitting defendant of the charge of attempted robbery, the prospective jurors who were chosen to decide the case necessarily nullified the antinullification directive that had been given to them.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Sims, J., and Davis, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 25, 2006, S146066.
Notes
We assume the trial court’s use of the word “[wjonderful” implied that there was no overt sign of disagreement from the prospective jurors.
In embellishing the language of the standard, the trial court did not heed our high court’s advice that “judges should closely follow the language and formulae for voir dire recommended by the Judicial Council in the Standards to ensure that all appropriate areas of inquiry are covered in an appropriate manner.”
(People
v.
Holt
(1997)
Effective January 1, 2006, this section was renumbered and amended, so it now reads: “It is important that I have your assurance that you will follow my instructions and rulings on the law and will apply that law to this case. To put it somewhat differently, whether you approve or disapprove of the court’s rulings or instructions, it is your solemn duty to accept as correct these statements of the law. You must accept and follow my instructions even if you disagree with the law. You may not substitute your own idea of what you think the law ought to be. Will all of you follow the law as given to you by me in this case?” (Cal. Stds. Jud. Admin., § 8.5(b)(21).)
We recognize that the opinion in
Williams
stated the issue somewhat differently, namely, whether “a trial court may or must instruct a jury specifically that it has no
power
to render a verdict contrary to the law or the facts before it. . . .”
(Williams, supra,
Penal Code section 1089 states in pertinent part: “If at any time, whether before or after the final submission of the case to the jury, a juror dies or becomes ill, or upon other good cause shown to the court is found to be unable to perform his or her duty, ... the court may order the juror to be discharged and draw the name of an alternate, who shall then take a place in the jury box, and be subject to the same rules and regulations as though the alternate juror had been selected as one of the original jurors.”
