State of Vermont v. Elizabeth MacFarland
No. 2020-297
Supreme Court of Vermont
September Term, 2021
2021 VT 87
On Aрpeal from Superior Court, Windham Unit, Criminal Division. Katherine A. Hayes, J.
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under
David Tartter, Deputy State‘s Attorney, Montpelier, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Matthew Valerio, Defender General, and Joshua S. O‘Hara, Appellate Defender, Montpelier, for Defendant-Appellant.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson,1 Eaton, Carroll and Cohen, JJ.
standard. We agree that the trial court erred in refusing to consider diminished capacity and that the error was not harmless. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
¶ 2. The following evidence was presented at trial. On the evening of December 21, 2018, defendant visited Arkham Bar in Brattleboro. During her stay at the bar, which lasted about an hour, defendant purchased a large bottle of champagne and proceeded to drink much of its contents. Soon thereafter, defendant became disruptive, and the bar‘s bouncer confronted defendant. He asked defendant to talk with him outside. In apparent response to the bouncer‘s question, defendant spoke incoherently about politics and her family. The bouncer persisted and again asked her to speak with him outside. Defendant refused. The bouncer then pulled on defendant‘s bar stool and told her she “had to leave.” Defendant stood up from her stool, ran to a corner, and muttered to herself. Soon thereafter, the bouncer called the police, and two Brattleboro police officers arrived a few minutes later.
¶ 3. Sergeant Jason Hamilton asked defendant “to come outside to talk to him.” She refused, and while remaining on the floor in a corner, “deflected” the officers’ order by speaking about her cell phone, which she held in her hand. Sergeant Hamilton stood defendant up by her arm, at which point defendаnt went completely limp. The officers were forced to carry defendant from the bar. As they did, defendant yelled that the officers were doing
¶ 4. Once outside, the officers put defendant on the ground and tried to handcuff her hands behind her back. The officers also tried to remove defendant‘s purse, which was slung over her arm. Defendant continued screaming loudly. She screamed that the officers were arresting her because “they were misogynistic and part of a patriarchal police structure.” Defendant screamed that the officers were too stupid to spеak with her because her IQ was unusually high. More officers arrived. Shortly after that, defendant ripped a piece of plastic off a police cruiser
during the struggle to restrain her. Eventually the officers subdued defendant and placed her, handcuffed, into a police cruiser.
¶ 5. Defendant was charged with four misdemeanors, two of which defendant appeals.2 Defendant was charged with unlawful trespass by “remain[ing] . . . in any place as to which notice against trespass is given by . . . actual communication by the person in lawful possession or his or her agent.”
¶ 6. Defendant was arrаigned on Monday, December 24, 2018. On that same date, the trial court issued a scheduling and discovery order to the parties that read, in part, “[d]efendant‘s attorney shall give notice of alibi, insanity, or diminished capacity defenses in the form required by
¶ 7. On cross-examination during the one-day trial, defense counsel questioned Sergeant Hamilton about defendant‘s preliminary breath test administered at the police station. The State objected that preliminary breath test results were not admissible; defense counsel agreed but asserted that he was only interested in establishing that defendant was intoxicated, and the extent to which the breath test result indicated the presence of alcohol was admissible for that purpose. Furthermore, defense counsel noted that lay testimony is admissible to establish
intoxication. The trial court agreed and then asked defense counsel whether he was making a diminished-capacity argument. Counsel replied that he was. The trial court asked whether the State had been notified of defendant‘s intention to pursue a diminished-capacity defense. The State replied that it had not received notice. Defense counsel asserted that no notice was required under the plain language of
¶ 8. After hearing the State‘s objections and defense counsel‘s explanation as to
¶ 9. Defense counsel called another officer to testify when presenting its case, Sergeant Stanley, who engaged with defendant outside the bar. Defense counsel and Sergeant Stanley participated in the following colloquy:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Did [defendant] appear to be under the influence of alcohol on the evening of December 21?
SERGEANT STANLEY: Yes, she did.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: And how do you know that? Or what forms the opinion?
SERGEANT STANLEY: Based off the circumstantial evidence of where she was at the time of the call, statements that I later provided that she was consuming[,] or was given to me that she was consuming alcohol, her yelling, her erratic behavior, the screaming, general disorderly behavior.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Okay. And so these are signs of impairment that you associate with being under the influence of alcohol?
SERGEANT STANLEY: Inability to follow directions, not listening to directions, being combative with law enforcement. Yes, they are.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Okay. Was [defendant] responding to officers’ requests?
SERGEANT STANLEY: No, she was not.
¶ 10. After a recess, the trial court determined that defense counsel failed to properly notify the State of its diminished capacity defense under
¶ 11. During summary arguments, defense counsel argued that the words “actual communication” in the unlawful trespass statute meant “that there‘s got to be not only a statement made to that individual, but that individual needs to be able to comprehend what that statement is for that to be actually communicated.” Counsel argued that the words communicated to defendant by the bouncer and the police officers were vague and not statements telling defendant she needed to leave the bar. However, because defense counsel could not raise the issue of diminished capacity, he did not argue that defendant did not actually perceive the bouncer‘s and the officers’ statements.
¶ 12. The trial court found defendant guilty of unlawful trespass and resisting arrest. Regarding the unlawful trespass charge, the court concluded that because the bouncer “instructed” defendant that she needed to leave the bar, defendant “therefore remained in the bar despite bеing instructed that she was trespassing.” The court also concluded that defendant intentionally resisted arrest. Defendant, the court found, “was aware that the officers were in fact uniformed police. In fact, during her resistance, she referred to that status.”
I. V.R.Cr.P. 12.1
¶ 13. We begin with defendant‘s first argument on appeal, whether the plain language of
at trial.3 “Procedural rules have statutory force.” State v. Gurung, 2020 VT 108, ¶ 23, 251 A.3d 572 (citation omitted). The interpretation of procedural rules, therefore, is a “question of law which we review de novo.” State v. Amidon, 2008 VT 122, ¶ 16, 185 Vt. 1, 967 A.2d 1126. “In construing a procedural rule, we look first to the rule‘s plain language, just as with statutory construction.” State v. Villar, 2017 VT 109, ¶ 7, 206 Vt. 236, 180 A.3d 588. Specifically, we look to the “plain, ordinary meaning” of the words themselves. Id. (citation omitted).
¶ 14.
A defendant who wishes to offer an alibi, raise the issue of insanity or offer expert testimony relating to a mental disease, or defect or any other mental condition of the defendant bearing upon the issue of his or her guilt must give written notice thereof, together with the information required by subdivision (b) of this rule, to the prosecuting attorney on the date of the status conference, or at least 28 days prior to trial, whichever is sooner.
¶ 15. First, the words “diminished capacity” do not appear in
¶ 16. Second, the first sentence of
¶ 17. The State points to prior decisions of this Court for the proposition that
¶ 18. The State also asks us to read State v. Duford, 163 Vt. 630, 660 A.2d 736 (1995) (mem.), as requiring defendants to provide notice of diminished capacity under
discussed whether the trial court erred in denying a defendant‘s diminished capaсity jury instruction because the “defendant had failed to give proper notice under
II. The Trial Court‘s Scheduling Order
¶ 19. The State argues that even if
¶ 20. The trial court issued a scheduling and discovery order on the same day defendant was arraigned. The order was titled “Week of 12/24/2018,” and was apparently a generalized
order used by the criminal division for that week‘s misdemeanor arraignments. The scheduling order required defense counsel to “give notice of alibi, insanity, or diminished capacity
¶ 21. The superior сourts have wide latitude to “enter such orders as may be necessary in order to ensure the orderly progression of the proceedings.”
¶ 22. We are mindful of the wide latitude that must be afforded to the superior courts to conduct proceedings in ways they deem appropriate. We do not in any way intend to limit that considerable discretion. To be clear, our holding on this point is a narrow one: we hold merely that
III. Harmless Error
¶ 23. We now turn to defendant‘s final argument that the trial court‘s refusal to consider diminished capacity in convicting defendant for resisting arrest and unlawful trespass constitutes reversible error.
¶ 24. It is well-established in Vermont that voluntary intoxication can form the basis of a diminished capacity defense. See State v. Congress, 2014 VT 129, ¶¶ 30-33, 198 Vt. 241, 114 A.3d 1128 (citing cases affirming that evidence of intoxication is basis for diminished capacity defense to crimes containing specific intent elements); State v. Kinney, 171 Vt. 239, 243, 762 A.2d 833, 837 (2000) (“Intoxication may affect a person‘s ability to form the mental state requisite for
conviction of certain crimes.“). Diminished capacity “is an attempt to defeat the State‘s obligation to show the necessary intent to commit the crime.” State v. Webster, 2017 VT 98, ¶ 20, 206 Vt. 178, 179 A.3d 149. Thus, “where there is evidence of intoxication such as to negate the requisite criminal intent, the court should normally . . . consider the intoxication evidence as bearing on intent.” Kinney, 171 Vt. at 243, 762 A.2d at 837. However, “intoxication is not a defense unless it reaches the point where [the] defendant fails to achieve the state of mental responsibility required by the charge.” Id. at 244, 762 A.2d at 837. For this reason, without more, “evidence of alcohol or drug consumption, even in large quantities, will not by itself require the court” to consider the evidence. Id.; see also State v. Cameron, 514 A.2d 1302, 1309 (N.J. 1986) (listing factors to determine whether evidence supports diminished capacity defense, including “quantity of intoxicant consumed, period of time involved, the actor‘s conduct as perceived by others . . . any odor of alcohol or any other intoxicating substance, thе results of any tests to determine blood-alcohol content, and the actor‘s ability to recall significant events“).
¶ 25. The evidence presented at trial confirms that defendant‘s alcohol consumption may have been a significant factor in her conduct on the evening in question and that a court might conclude this evidence supported a diminished capacity defense. Defendant consumed nearly two liters of wine in less than an hour. Defendant testified that she blacked out in the bar. Defendant did not form coherent responses to questions and directions put to her by either the bouncer or the police officers. Moreover, at trial, with the permission of the court after the State objected, defense counsel established on cross-examination that Sergeant Hamilton administered a preliminary breath test and that it indicated the presence of alcohol. Another officer, in response to defense counsel‘s questioning, replied that defendant‘s “yelling, her erratic behavior, the screaming, [her] general disorderly behavior [which included an] inability to follow directions, [and] not listening to directions” were all indicative of defendant‘s intoxication.
¶ 26. The State argues that the trial court‘s preclusion of diminished capacity, if error, was nevertheless harmless, because diminished capacity “is the other side of the coin” of the State‘s burden to prоve the mental state elements. The State points to various places in the trial record as evidence that the court acknowledged defendant‘s intoxication with respect to the mental state elements, and other places where the court heard arguments from defense counsel regarding defendant‘s intoxication. However, the State‘s argument misunderstands the difference between evidence of intoxication, of which the trial court undoubtedly considered some quantum, and a theory of diminished capacity that defendant could not form the requisite mental state to commit the crimes with
¶ 27. The court did discuss “defendant‘s obvious intoxication” when it concluded that defendant was guilty of disorderly conduct because, even though she was intoxicated, she acted recklessly because she “was aware of . . . the risk [that her conduct would cause public inconvenience] and [still] chose to scream at the top of her lungs.” However, the court did not discuss defendant‘s intoxication with respect to either the unlawful trespass charge or the resisting arrest charge, both of which, we conclude, contain specific intent mental elements.
¶ 28. It is undisputed that the resisting arrest charge contains a specific intent element; namely, that defendant “intentionally attempted to prevent a lawful arrest on herself.” The court found that defendant “was aware” she was being arrested by law enforcement because “she referred to their status” as such when she screamed that they were “misogynistic and part of a patriarchal police structure.” The State argues that, in light of the fact that “[n]othing in the trial court‘s ruling suggests that defendant‘s mental state was a close question,” any error is harmless because defendant‘s burden to prove diminished capacity by a preponderance of the evidence cannot change the outcome. But defendant does not bear the burden to “prove” diminished capacity by any standard; the burden remains with the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that defendant formed the necessary criminal intent. See State v. Webster, 2017 VT 98, ¶ 20 (explaining that defendants bear burden to prove insanity by preponderance of evidence, but State bears burden to prove mental elements when challenged by diminished capacity defense). Thus, we cannot conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the absence of any discussion of defendant‘s intoxication, much less under a theory of diminished capacity that she could not have formed the requisite mental intent, would not tend to negate the State‘s burden of proof that defendant formed the necessary intent to resist arrest.
¶ 29. Next, defendant argues that the plain language of
¶ 30. “The interpretation of a statute is a question of law that we review de novo.” State v. Therrien, 2011 VT 120, ¶ 9, 191 Vt. 24, 38 A.3d 1129. And we begin, where possible, with the “plain, ordinary meaning” of the statute. Id. We do this to effectuate the Legislature‘s intent which is, above all, our “overriding objective.” State v. Dixon, 169 Vt. 15, 17, 725 A.2d 920, 922 (1999) (quotation omitted).
¶ 31. The criminal trespass statute, “[r]ead as a whole, . . . lays out several trespass offenses, distinguished by the location of the offense and the resulting punishment, and thus creates a cohesive statutory scheme.” Richards, 2021 VT 40, ¶ 26.
(a)(1) A person shall be imprisoned for not more than three months or fined not more than $500.00, or both, if, without legal authority or the consent of the person in lawful possession, he or she enters or remains on any land or in any place as to which notice against trespass is given by:
(A) actual communication by the person in lаwful possession or his or her agent or by a law enforcement officer acting on behalf of such person or his or her agent . . .
¶ 32. In State v. Pixley, we held that the form of notice by “signs or placards so designed and situated to give reasonable notice” created an objective standard. 2018 VT 110, ¶ 13, 208 Vt. 529, 200 A.3d 174 (quoting
¶ 33. More recently, in Richards, we held that the requirement that the defendant had no legal authority to enter or remain did not contain an implied knowledge component. 2021 VT 40, ¶ 26. We noted that even though there was no implied knowledge element in
acted as a “functional equivalent to a knowledge element.” Id. ¶ 25. Citing Pixley‘s objective standard for the “signs or placards” form of notice, we acknowledged “that the notice element does not serve as an exact substitute for knowledge in all instances under
¶ 34. The question is whether the notice element in the unlawful trespass statute can denote a subjective standard if the notice is given by “actual communication.” As we have intimated in recent cases looking at
¶ 35. Defendant‘s subjective perception of communication intended to inform her of trespass is a necessary part of determining whether the State has met its burden as to the notice-by-actual-communication element in
she did not perceive that communication as notice of trespass.
¶ 36. The vast majority of jurisdictions with similar criminal trespass statutes have also concluded that they contain at least some subjective element. See 3 W. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 21.2(c) (3d ed. 2020) (“Only one criminal trespass statute has been found expressly declaring that it is an absolute liability offense, i.e., one for which no mental state whatsoever is required.“) (citation omitted). Indeed, a common feature of these statutes is the requirement that the would-be trespasser “be aware of the fact that he is making an unwarranted intrusion, which serves to exclude from criminal liability . . . the inadvertent trespasser.” Id. (emphasis added) (quotation omitted). A person who is not actually aware of notice when communicated by the appropriate person, as opposed to by posting, and therefore remains against that notice, cannot be guilty of misdemeanor unlawful trespass.
¶ 37. The trial court did not appear to apply a subjective standard to find defendant guilty of unlawful trespass. The court credited the bouncer‘s testimony that “he instructed [defendant] that she needed to leave the bar, and that she refused to do so, despite his being an employee of the bar with authority to require her to leave.” The trial court concluded that “defendant therefore
remained in the bar despite being instructed that she was trespassing and needed to leave.”7 The court, at least, should have considered defendant‘s actual subjective experience of the encounter with the bouncer; it is not enough to conclude that defendant “refused” to leave the bar without explaining, to some extent, how that related to her state of mind at the time.
¶ 38. Finally, the Stаte‘s argument that counsel‘s defense to unlawful trespass did not rely on defendant‘s mental state is
Reversed and remanded for further findings and conclusions based on all the evidence and otherwise in accordance with this opinion.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
Notes
When the defendant gives notice of an alibi, he shall provide with the notice a written statement of the specific place or places at which the defendant claims to have been at the time of the alleged offense and the names and addresses of witnesses upon whom he intends to rely to establish such alibi. When the defendant gives notice that sanity is in issue or he will use expert testimony as provided in subdivision (a), he shall provide with the notice a written statement of the names and addresses of the witnesses he intends to call to provide expert testimony or to raise the issue of sanity.
