STATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent, vs. ANWAR RANDLE, Appellant.
No. SC94646
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI en banc
August 4, 2015
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ST. LOUIS COUNTY, Honorable Robert S. Cohen, Judge
Opinion issued August 4, 2015
Facts
In November 2009, Mr. Randle and two other men broke into a home occupied by Cameron Bass and Kena Coleman. Mr. Randle had been involved in a relationship with Ms. Coleman. Mr. Randle, armed with a bottle of vodka, and one of his companions, armed with a gun, went to the bedroom looking for Mr. Bass. Mr. Bass fled to an adjacent room, where he saw a man armed with a shotgun. Mr. Randle followed Mr. Bass and hit him repeatedly with the vodka bottle until the bottle broke on Mr. Bass’ head. Mr. Randle and his two companions then left the house. Mr. Randle was arrested following a vehicle chase.
The State charged Mr. Randle as a prior offender with one count of first-degree burglary, one count of first-degree assault and two counts of armed criminal action. At trial, Mr. Randle testified that he entered the house using his own keys. He also testified that he threw the vodka bottle at Mr. Bass in self-defense.
The trial court instructed the jury that it could find Mr. Randle guilty of second-degree assault if the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Randle “knowingly” caused injury to Mr. Bass by shattering the vodka bottle over his
The jury found Mr. Randle guilty of trespass, second-degree assault and armed criminal action based on the assault. The trial court sentenced Mr. Randle to six months in the St. Louis County jail for trespass and seven years each in the Missouri Department of Corrections for the assault and armed criminal action convictions. Mr. Randle appeals.
Analysis
Mr. Randle‘s first point on appeal is dispositive. Mr. Randle asserts that the trial court erred by refusing to submit his proposed jury instruction on the lesser-included offense of third-degree assault. Mr. Randle is correct.
Section
“[T]he jury‘s right to disbelieve all or any part of the evidence, and its right to refuse to draw any needed inference, is a sufficient basis in the evidence to justify giving any lesser included offense instruction when the offenses are separated only by one differential element for which the state bears the burden of proof.” Jackson, 433 S.W.3d at 401. Lesser-included offenses that are separated from the greater offense by one differential element for which the state bears the burden of proof are referred to as “nested” lesser-included offenses. A “nested” lesser-included offense consists of a subset of the elements of the greater offense. Consequently, ”it is impossible to commit the greater without necessarily committing the lesser.” Id. at 404 (quoting State v. Derenzy, 89 S.W.3d 472, 474 (Mo. banc 2002)) (emphasis in original). A defendant is entitled, upon proper request, to an instruction on a “nested” lesser-included offense and, therefore, does not have to introduce affirmative evidence or “cast doubt” over the State‘s evidence in any way. Id. at 401-402.
In pertinent part, section
injury to Mr. Bass necessarily means there was also a basis in the evidence for the jury to convict Mr. Randle of third-degree assault by “recklessly” causing physical injury to Mr. Bass. Mr. Randle was entitled to his properly requested instruction on the nested lesser-included offense of second-degree assault.
The State argues that third-degree assault is not a “nested” lesser-included offense within the offense of second-degree assault because the different mental states do not constitute differential elements. The State reasons that each offense involved “physical injury,” but second-degree assault requires proof that the defendant “knowingly” caused physical injury while third-degree assault requires proof that the defendant “recklessly” caused physical injury. The State concludes that “knowingly” is not a differential element that, when removed from the greater offense, leaves a smaller subset of elements that comprise the offense of assault in the third degree.
The State‘s argument is without merit. The offenses of second- and third-degree assault require the State to prove that the defendant acted with a different intent with respect to the infliction of physical injury. Therefore, different mental states are required to prove the separate offenses of second- and third-degree domestic assault, and these different mens rea requirements are differential elements on which the State bears the burden of proof. The remaining element of both offenses, the infliction of physical injury, remains the same. Second- and third-degree assault are “nested” lesser-included offenses.
The State also argues that the evidence showing that Mr. Randle smashed the vodka bottle over Mr. Bass’ head cannot support an inference of recklessness because
such conduct is practically certain to result in injury and, therefore, supports only an inference that Mr. Randle “knowingly” caused physical injury to Mr. Bass. This argument is foreclosed by section
Conclusion
The trial court erred by refusing Mr. Randle‘s proffered jury instruction on the nested lesser-included offense of third-degree assault. Consequently, Mr. Randle‘s conviction for second-degree assault is vacated. Mr. Randle‘s conviction for armed criminal action based on his assault conviction is also vacated.
The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded.
Richard B. Teitelman, Judge
All concur.
