A jury fоund Charles Peterson guilty of robbing a retail store. We reverse because the trial court erroneously excluded evidence bearing on the bias or motive of a kеy State witness and rejected a special jury instruction applicable to Peterson’s theory of defense.
Both errors related to the use of force that is а necessary element of the crime of robbery. A larcenous taking of property constitutes a robbery if “in the course of the taking” there is a use of force, viоlence, assault or putting in fear. § 812.13(1), Fla. Stat. (2008). An act is “ ‘in the course of the taking’ if it occurs either prior to, contemporaneous with, or subsequent to the taking of the prоperty” and “it and the act of taking constitute a continuous series of acts or events.” § 812.13(S)(b).
Peterson’s defense focused on the last-mentioned aspect of the сharge. His theory was that he had abandoned the stolen property before he used force to escape the scene. In such circumstances, Florida’s courts have held that the act of taking and the use of force were not a continuous series of acts or events for purposes of the robbery statute.
See State v. Baker,
Both the State’s case and Peterson’s theory of defense in large part hinged on the testimony of the State’s chief witness at trial, Theоdora Green. Green recounted that on the day of the incident she was working her shift as a sales clerk at a Dollar General store. She observed Peterson in the socks and underwear aisle putting merchandise in the waistband of his pants. Green called the police and secured the front door to keep Peterson in the storе. She was assisted by the store manager, who happened to arrive during the episode. Apprised of the situation, the manager endeavored to hold the door closed from the outside. Peterson approached the exit, left his shopping basket, and forced his way out of the store by pushing Green aside. Peterson was able to escape in a car that pulled up in front of the store.
Green’s testimony was pivotal because she was the only witness who contradicted Peterson’s theory that he had transferred *689 the stolen merchandise to the shopping basket that he abandoned before shoving his way out of the store. She testified that some bystanders briefly grabbеd Peterson’s shirt as he fled, and she glimpsed merchandise still packed around his waist. After police officers responded to the scene, the store manager showed them a videotape of the incident captured by the store’s surveillance system. The videotape was not preserved, but the manager and the officers testified that it showed Peterson taking merchandise off the shelf and concealing it under his clothing. Peterson’s abandoned shopping basket also contained merchandise. Thе witnesses were unable to discern from the videotape whether the items in the basket were the same ones that they saw Peterson take from the shelves.
On appеal, Peterson complains that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding evidence about the reason Green no longer worked at the Dollar General storе and about her desire to regain her job. In a proffer, the defense established that Green left because she was suspected of stealing from the store and that she still wished to work there. Defense counsel argued that this evidence was relevant to show her bias and motive to testify favorably for her former employer. The court allowed the defense to establish simply that Green no longer worked at the store. It prohibited any other questions on that topic.
It has long been established that evidence of a witness’s interest, motives, animus, or status in relation to the proceeding is not collateral or immaterial.
Bryan v. State,
In Peterson’s case the trial court abused its discretion in preventing the defense from showing that Green had a motive to testify as she did, that being to curry favor in an attempt either tо regain her job or to improve her former employer’s recommendation for future employment. Because Green was the only witness who testified that Peterson hаd the .merchandise with him when he left the store, we cannot say that this error was harmless.
See State v. DiGuilio,
Peterson also challenges the trial court’s determination to give only the standard jury instruсtion on robbery. The court rejected Peterson’s request that it also instruct the jury that “[i]f it is established that the property was abandoned prior to the use of force then you must find the Defendant not guilty of a robbery.”
A defendant who requests a special jury instruction must demonstrate that (1) the special instruction is supported by the evidence; (2) the stаndard instruction does not adequately cover the theory of defense; and (3) the special instruction is a correct statement of the law and not misleading or confusing.
Stephens v. State,
We also conclude that the standard instruсtion did not adequately cover Peterson’s theory of defense. The standard instruction required the jury to find that force was used “in the course of the taking,” which was then defined аs “prior to, contemporaneous with, or subsequent to” the taking and that the use of force and the taking of the property “constitute[d] a continuous series of acts or events.” Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Crim.) 15.1. The standard instruction did not inform the jury that if the property was abandoned prior to the use of force, under the law the taking and the use of force werе not a continuous series or acts or events. As such, the instruction did not cover Peterson’s theory of defense.
We recognize that standard jury instructions are presumed correct and are preferred over special instructions.
See Stephens,
This brings us to the final criterion— whether Peterson’s proposed special instruction was supported by the evidencе. The store manager and the responding police officers testified that they could not say whether Peterson left the store with merchandise. They acknowledged thаt he had left items in the abandoned shopping basket that were consistent with the items they observed him taking from the shelves when they reviewed the surveillance tape. Greеn was the only witness to testify on this point, and her credibility was subject to impeachment. The defense would have been able to argue that the jury should consider her bias and mоtive when weighing her testimony. Thus, the defense presented a version of the evidence that warranted the special instruction. The trial court abused its discretion when refusing to give this instruction, and we must reverse on this issue as well.
Reversed and remanded for new trial.
