Daniel Paul PERLEY, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*673 Daniel Paul Perley, Lake City, pro se.
Bill MсCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Myra J. Fried, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
POLEN, J.
Appellant, Daniel Paul Perley, appeals a judgment and sentence for one count of escape and two counts of resisting an officer without violence. Perley raises fourteen issues in this appeal, but we write to address only two of the issues in this opinion. *674 Perley argues the trial court еrred in allowing the State to present two separate theories of escape when only one count of escape was charged in the information, and in denying his motion for arrest of judgment on the conviction for escape. We agree with Perley's arguments, reverse his escape conviction and remand for a new trial on a single count of escape.
Perley was the passenger in a car detained as part of a routine traffic stop. When Perley was asked to show his identification, he did not immediately comply. The offiсer became concerned about the placement of Perley's hands and began to walk around to the passenger door. At this рoint, Perley jumped out of the car, allegedly shoved the officer and began running away. The officer caught Perley and a struggle ensued. Perley broke away and the officer pursued him. After the officer caught Perley and he was placed in the back of a police car, Perley began complaining of chest pains. Perley was taken to the hospital and while there, attempted to escape but was caught. Perley was charged with one count of escape, but at trial, the State informed the jury it could convict him of either instancе of escape.
"It is a basic tenet of constitutional law that due process is violated when an individual is convicted of a crime not charged in the charging instrument." Castillo v. State,
The information was not fundamentally defective in and of itself. Count two of the information fully laid out the elements of escape, even though it did not include any factual specifics surrounding the escape which would have clarified the charge. However, whilе the information itself is not fundamentally defective, we find the trial court fundamentally erred in allowing the jury to deliberate on two separatе instances of escape where Perley was only charged with one count of escape. The State contends that the two instances of escape merely constitute different theories of the crime, and argue that it was perfectly acceptablе for it to move forward on dual theories at trial. We disagree with the State's argument. While the presentation of dual theories of a crimе is allowable, this occurs when a defendant is charged with the commission of one crime, and the State presents two scenarios or bases supporting the commission of the crime. See Mackerley v. State,
The State's actions make the unanimity of the jury's verdict questionable, *675 as some members of the jury could have determined that one incident constituted еscape, while others on the jury could have determined that the other incident constituted escape, rather than agreeing unanimоusly that the same incident constituted escape. "As a state constitutional matter, a criminal conviction requires a unanimous verdict in Florida." Robinson v. State,
While these cases deal with situations in which the charging instrument gives an "either/or" scenario, as opposed to this case in which the charging instrument simply lays out the elements of the crime, the effect on jury unanimity is the same. The State could have charged Perley with both instances of escape, but chose not to do so. The State cannot then present evidence as to both alleged escаpes and inform the jury it can convict for either one, thereby making it difficult, if not impossible, to determine which incident the jury convicted Perley fоr, or if the jury reached an unanimous decision. Therefore, we reverse Perley's conviction for escape, and remand.
Perley аlso argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for arrest of judgment. The main thrust of the motion was whether the count of escape was рroperly charged. It follows from our analysis above and our reversal of Perley's conviction for escape that the trial cоurt erred in denying the motion for arrest of judgment on this issue.
Perley also argues that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that a traffic stop constituted а lawful execution of a legal duty, as this impermissibly removed a disputed issue from the jury's consideration. We disagree with Perley's argument; however, as we are remanding for a new trial, we wish to point out that Perley's charge of escape actually arose from the officer's arresting him for an alleged battery of a police officer, not from the traffic stop. Therefore, the trial court should have instructed the jury on whether an arrest incident to a battery of a police officer was a lawful execution of a duty, rather than a traffic stop. Although Perley was acquitted of the battery at trial, the trial court can still instruct the jury on this point.
We reverse Perley's conviction for escаpe and affirm his convictions for resisting an officer without violence. We remand for a new trial on a single count of escape, for which the State must elect on which of the two incidents it is proceeding.
WARNER and GROSS, JJ., concur.
