The defendant, Frederick Braggs, appeals from his conviction for assault and contends his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the instruction on assault as a lesser-included offense of attempt to commit murder. He claims we should overrule
Blanford v. State,
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
In May 2007, Frederick Braggs forced his way into the apartment of Bobby Seir-berling without Seirberling’s permission. He then proceeded into the apartment and attacked Seirberling’s girlfriend, Ngan Huynh. During these events, Seirberling hit his head on the intercom and was momentarily stunned. When he regained his footing, he looked back to see Braggs with his knee on Huynh’s chest as she lay on the loveseat in the living room. Seirber-ling then ran downstairs to the manager’s apartment to get help and call 911. When Seirberling returned upstairs to the apartment, he found Huynh laying in the doorway to his apartment. Huynh testified that after Seirberling left, Braggs held her down and stabbed her in the chest, neck, hip, and left arm with a knife while repeatedly saying, “I want to kill you.” Braggs then fled the apartment. Eventually, the police and an ambulance arrived, and Huynh was taken to the hospital. She had four non-life-threatening injuries. However, the stab wound to her left arm required extensive surgery to repair a severed nerve.
Braggs was charged by trial information with burglary in the first degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 713.1 and 713.3, and willful injury in violation of Iowa Code section 708.4(1). The State later amended the trial information to add the charge of attempted murder in violation of Iowa Code section 707.11.
A jury trial was held. At trial, both Seirberling and Huynh identified Braggs as Huynh’s assailant. Huynh testified further that she had met Braggs three or four months earlier when she was living in a homeless shelter. She knew Braggs only by the name “Fred” and testified she did not like him and that he bothered her. Friends of Braggs also testified that he was ranting and raving about his girlfriend earlier on the day of the attack. They testified he stated, “I can’t believe all I done for her ... and she treat me like this.” One of the friends testified Braggs showed him a black-handled steak knife just before the friend dropped Braggs off
The trial court submitted jury instructions on the charge of attempted murder that read in part:
If the State has proved all of the elements, the defendant is guilty of Attempt to Commit Murder. If the State has failed to prove any one of the elements, the defendant is not guilty of Attempt to Commit Murder and you will then consider the charge of Assault as explained in Instruction No. 39.
Instruction No. 39 read:
The State must prove all of the following elements of Assault as a lesser included offense as charged in Count III:
1. On or about the 30th day of May, 2007, the defendant did an act which was meant to cause pain or injury to Ngan Huynh.
2. The defendant had the apparent ability to do the act.
If the State has proved all the elements, the defendant is guilty of Assault. If the State has failed to prove any one of the elements, the defendant is not guilty.
Braggs’s attorney did not object to any of the jury instructions.
The jury returned verdicts of guilty to burglary in the first degree, willful injury causing serious injury, and the lesser-included offense of simple assault. The defendant appealed. The court of appeals affirmed his conviction. He filed an application for further review with this court, which we accepted.
II. Scope of Review.
Generally we preserve ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims for postconviction relief; however, we will address these claims on direct appeal if the record is sufficient.
State v. Lane,
To establish an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, a defendant must demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that: “ ‘(1) his trial counsel failed to perform an essential duty, and (2) this failure resulted in prejudice.’ ”
Anfinson v. State,
III. Discussion and Analysis.
In his appeal, Braggs alleges that the trial court erred in determining assault is a lesser-included offense of attempted murder and that his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to object to the court’s inclusion of assault as a lesser-included offense of attempted murder in the jury instructions.
1
He claims we should overrule
Blanford
and
Powers
to the extent those decisions hold assault is a lesser-included offense of at
Assault was first declared a lesser-included offense of attempt to commit murder in 1979.
Powers,
Braggs claims that the cases cited in
Poivers
as authority for its declaration that assault is a lesser-included offense of attempted murder were based upon the pre-1978 Iowa Code, which recognized the crime of assault with intent to murder.
See
Iowa Code § 690.6 (1977) (“If any person assault another with intent to commit murder, he shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not exceeding thirty years.”). This assertion is correct. Both cases cited in
Powers
rely on the pre-1978 Iowa Code section 690.6.
See Powers,
A person commits a class “C” felony when, with the intent to cause the death of any person and not under circumstances which would justify the person’s actions, the person does any act by which he or she expects to set in motion a force or chain of events which will cause or result in the death of such other person.
Id. ch. 1245, ch. 1, § 711 (codified at Iowa Code § 707.11 (1979)). This new statute became effective Jan. 1, 1978. Id. ch. 2145, ch. 4, § 529. The statute has remained substantively unchanged since 1978. See Iowa Code § 707.11 (2009). 2
As a result of these statutory revisions, an “assault” is no longer an express element of attempted murder. Therefore, we must determine whether assault is a lesser-included offense under the current statutory scheme, or whether Powers, Blanford, and Luckett should be overruled.
Iowa’s test for determining whether an offense is a lesser-included of a greater offense was outlined in
State v. Jeffries,
[U]nder the legal test the lesser offense is necessarily included in the greater offense if it is impossible to commit the greater offense without also committing the lesser offense. If the lesser offense contains an element not required for thegreater offense, the lesser cannot be included in the greater. This is because it would be possible in that situation to commit the greater without also having committed the lesser. In using this test, we look to the statutory elements rather than to the charge or the evidence.
Jeffries,
In applying the impossibility test we only look to the statutory elements of the offenses.
Jeffries,
1. The person does any act which the person expects to set in motion a force or chain of events which will cause or result in the death of another.
2. The person does so with the intent to cause the death of another.
Iowa Code § 707.11. 4 One of the three alternative means of committing an assault is:
1. Any act which is intended to cause pain or injury to, or which is intended to result in physical contact which will be insulting or offensive to another, coupled with the apparent ability to execute the act.
Iowa Code § 708.1(1). 5
Our review of the offenses reveals that to commit attempted murder a person must do an act by which the person intends to set in motion a course of events that will result in the death of another, Iowa Code section 707.11, and, under subsection (1) to commit assault a person must do an act which is intended to cause another pain or injury which will be painful, injurious, or offensive. Iowa Code § 708.1(1). As a practical matter, one cannot intend to set in motion a person’s death without also intending to cause them pain or injury. Death is the total cessation of all vital functions and signs of life.
Black’s Law Dictionary
428 (8th ed. 2004). To cause someone’s death, one must injure them.
Id.
at 801 (to injure someone is to cause physical damage to a person’s body). Braggs’s focus on the 1978 rewrite of the Iowa Code is misplaced. “It is not essential that the elements of the lesser offense be described in the statutes in the same manner as the elements of the greater offense.”
State v. Turecek,
Both statutes require an expectation that the act will result in some harm. Attempted murder requires that the person expects to do something which will cause or result in the death of another. Iowa Code § 707.11. Assault has a similar element in that the offense requires a person have “the apparent ability to execute the act.”
Id.
§ 708.1. Apparent ability under the assault statute means only that the ability to complete the act be apparent to the actor, meaning “ ‘that his expectations of placing another in fear [or of causing them pain or injury] must be reasonable.’ ”
State v. Jackson,
Because assault under Iowa Code section 708.1(1) is a lesser-included offense of attempted murder, an objection on this ground would have been without merit. Therefore, we find Braggs’s counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to the trial court’s determination that assault is a lesser-included offense of attempted murder.
IY. Disposition.
We affirm Braggs’s conviction and sentence.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Before an offense may be submitted to the jury as a lesser-included offense of the charged crime, the court must determine (1) whether the offense is a lesser-included offense of the charged crime, and (2) whether there is a factual basis for submitting the offense in the pending case.
State v. Spates,
. We find no pertinent substantive difference between the 2005 and 2009 versions of the statutes at issue. Therefore, unless otherwise indicated all references are to the 2009 Iowa Code.
. Since this case was decided, the Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure cited, rule 21(3), has been amended and changed to rule 2.22(3). However, it still retains the language the court relied upon: "In all cases, the defendant may be found guilty of any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which the defendant is charged." Iowa R.Crim. P. 2.22(3) (emphasis added). The Iowa Code section cited in Jeffries, section 701.9, remains the same today. Iowa Code § 701.9 (2009).
. This Code section was amended in 2009, but the amendment does not change our analysis of this case. See 2009 Iowa Acts ch. 119, § 52 (codified at Iowa Code § 707.11 (Supp. 2009)).
. We note that Iowa Code sections 708.1(2) and (3) may require a separate analysis which is not before us today because only subsection (1) was instructed on as a lesser-included offense.
